Proteomic-based drug testing is an emerging approach to establish the clinical value and antineoplastic potential of multi-kinase inhibitors. The multikinase inhibitor midostaurin (PKC412) is a promising new agent used to treat patients with advanced systemic mastocytosis (SM). We examined the target interaction-profiles and the mast cell (MC)-targeting effects of two pharmacologically relevant midostaurin metabolites, CGP52421 and CGP62221. All three compounds, midostaurin and the two metabolites, suppressed IgE-dependent histamine secretion in basophils and MC with reasonable IC 50 values. Midostaurin and CGP62221 also produced growth-inhibition and dephosphorylation of KIT in the MC leukemia cell line HMC-1.2, whereas the second metabolite, CGP52421, that accumulates in vivo, showed no substantial effects.Chemical proteomic profiling and drug-competition experiments revealed that midostaurin interacts with KIT and several additional kinase-targets. The key downstream-regulator FES was recognized by midostaurin and CGP62221, but not by CGP52421 in MC lysates, whereas the IgEreceptor-downstream target SYK was recognized by both metabolites. Together, our data show that the clinically relevant midostaurin metabolite CGP52421 inhibits IgE-dependent histamine release, but is a weak inhibitor of MC proliferation which may have clinical implications and may explain why mediator-related symptoms improve in SM patients even when disease progression occurs.