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1.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 2147, 2020 02 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32034185

ABSTRACT

Phosphoproteins are the key indicators of signaling network pathway activation. Many disease treatment therapies are designed to inhibit these pathways and effective diagnostics are required to evaluate the efficacy of these treatments. Phosphoprotein IHC have been impractical for diagnostics due to inconsistent results occurring from technical limitations. We have designed and tested a novel cold transport device and rapid cold plus warm formalin fixation protocol using phosphoproteins IHC. We collected 50 liver tumors that were split into two experimental conditions: 2 + 2 rapid fixation (2 hours cold then 2 hour warm formalin) or 4 hour room-temperature formalin. We analyzed primary hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 10) and metastatic gastrointestinal tumors (n = 28) for phosphoprotein IHC markers pAKT, pERK, pSRC, pSTAT3, and pSMAD2 and compared them to slides obtained from the clinical blocks. Expression of pERK and pSRC, present in the metastatic colorectal carcinoma, were better preserved with the rapid processing protocol while pSTAT3 expression was detected in hepatocellular carcinoma. Differences in pSMAD2 expression were difficult to detect due to the ubiquitous nature of protein expression. There were only 3 cases expressing pAKT and all exhibited a dramatic loss of signal for the standard clinical workflow. The rapid cold preservation shows improvement in phosphoprotein preservation.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/metabolism , Formaldehyde , Liver Neoplasms/metabolism , Phosphoproteins/analysis , Tissue Fixation/methods , Biomarkers, Tumor/immunology , Cryopreservation/instrumentation , Cryopreservation/methods , Humans , Immunohistochemistry/methods , Liver/chemistry , Phosphoproteins/immunology , Tissue Fixation/instrumentation
2.
Cell Tissue Bank ; 21(1): 89-97, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31838727

ABSTRACT

Precision tissue diagnostics rely on high quality input specimens so that assay results are not affected by artifact, but advances in collection and processing of tissue specimens have lagged behind innovations in diagnostic assay development. Therefore, we have designed and evaluated a novel surgical tissue collection device that maintains and monitors sample temperature and motion throughout transport so that the major preanalytical variable of tissue temperature can be controlled and measured. This device, in combination with an improved cold-hot tissue fixation protocol affords optimal biomarker preservation in less overall time, thereby simultaneously improving diagnostic quality and turnaround time. We collected 50 primary and metastatic liver tumors using a novel transport device. Tissue was fixed using a rapid cold-hot fixation protocol and immunohistochemical assays were used to assess the performance of the device, in comparison to control tissue preserved using standard clinical fixation protocol. Two pathologists evaluated the IHC studies in a blinded fashion to determine the immunophenotype of each tumor. The observed IHC staining intensities and the clinical impressions of the immunophenotypes did not differ between tissue collected with the novel device and control tissue, while improvements in processing time were achieved. The novel cold transport device and rapid fixation protocol can be successfully and safely combined and used to monitor specimen conditions, thus preserving the diagnostic utility of specimens and improving the overall turn-around time of the diagnostic process.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Biopsy/instrumentation , Neoplasms/pathology , Tissue Fixation/instrumentation , Tissue Preservation/instrumentation , Biopsy/economics , Cold Temperature , Equipment Design , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Temperature , Time Factors , Tissue Fixation/economics , Tissue Preservation/economics
3.
Biopreserv Biobank ; 17(4): 303-311, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31107113

ABSTRACT

The development of precision testing for disease diagnosis has advanced medicine by specifically matching patients with drugs to treat specific diseases. High-quality diagnostics start with high-quality tissue specimens. The development and optimization of tissue handling and processing have lagged behind bioassay development. Ultrasound time-of-flight (TOF) technology has been successfully used to monitor the critical processing step of tissue fixation with formalin. In this study, we expand the use of this technology to monitor tissue dehydration and clearing by analyzing TOF signals from 270 different specimens, representing 13 different tissue types obtained through surgical resections. We determined the time constant τ90 for each tissue type for the following tissue processing solvents: 70% ethanol, 90% ethanol, 100% ethanol, and xylene. The TOF signals were correlated with tissue morphology to ensure that high-quality tissue was produced. Tissues can be grouped into those exhibiting fast and slow reagent diffusion. We monitored incomplete dehydration of tissue by skipping a key processing step, dehydration in absolute ethanol, and then correlated the τ90 with poor histomorphology, demonstrating that the technique can detect significant processing errors. Ultrasound TOF technology can therefore be used to monitor all phases of tissue processing cycle and yields an important preanalytical quality metric.


Subject(s)
Histocytological Preparation Techniques/methods , Pathology, Clinical/methods , Dehydration , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Tissue Fixation
4.
Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol ; 25(3): 160-167, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28027117

ABSTRACT

Personalized medicine promises diagnosis and treatment of disease at the individual level and relies heavily on clinical specimen integrity and diagnostic assay quality. Preanalytics, the collection and handling steps of a clinical specimen before immunohistochemistry or other clinical assay, are critically important to enable the correct diagnosis of disease. However, the effects of preanalytics are often overlooked due to a lack of standardization and limited assessment tools to quantify their variation. Here, we report a novel real-time ultrasound time-of-flight instrument that is capable of monitoring and imaging the critical step in formalin fixation, diffusion of the fixative into tissue, which provides a quantifiable quality metric for tissue fixation in the clinical laboratory ensuring consistent downstream molecular assay results. We analyzed hundreds of tissue specimens from 34 distinct human tissue types and 12 clinically relevant diseased tissues for diffusion and fixation metrics. Our measurements can be converted into tissue diffusivity constants that correlate with the apparent diffusion constant calculated using magnetic resonance imaging (R=0.83), despite the differences in the approaches, indicating that our approach is biophysically plausible. Using data collected from time-of-flight analysis of many tissues, we have therefore developed a novel rapid fixation program that could ensure high-quality downstream assay results for a broad range of human tissue types.


Subject(s)
Precision Medicine , Tissue Fixation/methods , Ultrasonics , Humans , Immunohistochemistry
5.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 3(1): 017002, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26866049

ABSTRACT

The preservation of certain labile cancer biomarkers with formaldehyde-based fixatives can be considerably affected by preanalytical factors such as quality of fixation. Currently, there are no technologies capable of quantifying a fixative's concentration or the formation of cross-links in tissue specimens. This work examined the ability to detect formalin diffusion into a histological specimen in real time. As formaldehyde passively diffused into tissue, an ultrasound time-of-flight (TOF) shift of several nanoseconds was generated due to the distinct sound velocities of formalin and exchangeable fluid within the tissue. This signal was resolved with a developed digital acoustic interferometry algorithm, which compared the phase differential between signals and computed the absolute TOF with subnanosecond precision. The TOF was measured repeatedly across the tissue sample for several hours until diffusive equilibrium was realized. The change in TOF from 6-mm thick ex vivo human tonsil fit a single-exponential decay ([Formula: see text]) with rate constants that varied drastically spatially between 2 and 10 h ([Formula: see text]) due to substantial heterogeneity. This technology may prove essential to personalized cancer diagnostics by documenting and tracking biospecimen preanalytical fixation, guaranteeing their suitability for diagnostic assays, and speeding the workflow in clinical histopathology laboratories.

6.
PLoS One ; 9(11): e113608, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25409462

ABSTRACT

Phosphorylated signaling molecules are biomarkers of cancer pathophysiology and resistance to therapy, but because phosphoprotein analytes are often labile, poorly controlled clinical laboratory practices could prevent translation of research findings in this area from the bench to the bedside. We therefore compared multiple biomarker and phosphoprotein immunohistochemistry (IHC) results in 23 clinical colorectal carcinoma samples after either a novel, rapid tissue fixation protocol or a standard tissue fixation protocol employed by clinical laboratories, and we also investigated the effect of a defined post-operative "cold" ischemia period on these IHC results. We found that a one-hour cold ischemia interval, allowed by ASCO/CAP guidelines for certain cancer biomarker assays, is highly deleterious to certain phosphoprotein analytes, specifically the phosphorylated epidermal growth factor receptor (pEGFR), but shorter ischemic intervals (less than 17 minutes) facilitate preservation of phosphoproteins. Second, we found that a rapid 4-hour, two temperature, formalin fixation yielded superior staining in several cases with select markers (pEGFR, pBAD, pAKT) compared to a standard overnight room temperature fixation protocol, despite taking less time. These findings indicate that the future research and clinical utilities of phosphoprotein IHC for assessing colorectal carcinoma pathophysiology absolutely depend upon attention to preanalytical factors and rigorously controlled tissue fixation protocols.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Tissue Fixation/methods , Colorectal Neoplasms/metabolism , ErbB Receptors/metabolism , Fixatives/chemistry , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Phosphoproteins/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/metabolism , Temperature , bcl-Associated Death Protein/metabolism
7.
PLoS One ; 8(1): e54138, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23349806

ABSTRACT

Formalin fixation is a mainstay of modern histopathologic analysis, yet the practice is poorly standardized and a significant potential source of preanalytical errors. Concerns of workflow and turnaround time drive interest in developing shorter fixation protocols, but rapid protocols can lead to poor histomorphology or inadequate downstream assay results. Additionally, assays such as immunohistochemistry for phosphorylated epitopes have historically been challenging in the context of formalin-fixed tissue, indicating that there may be room for improvement in this process that is fundamental to the practice of anatomic pathology. With these issues in mind, we studied basic formalin biochemistry to develop a novel formalin fixation protocol that involves a pre-incubation in subambient temperature formalin prior to a brief exposure to heated formalin. This new protocol is more rapid than standard protocols yet preserves histomorphology and yields tissue that is compatible with an expanded set of downstream clinical and research assays, including immunohistochemistry for phosphorylated epitopes.


Subject(s)
Formaldehyde , Immunohistochemistry/methods , Temperature , Tissue Fixation/methods , Fixatives , Humans , Palatine Tonsil/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2/analysis , Reproducibility of Results , Time Factors
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