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Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia

BACKGROUND: A persistent goal of oncologic histochemistry is to microscopically identify neoplasia tinctorially. Consequently, the newly developed CellDetect(® )staining technology, that appears to exhibit this property, warrants clinical evaluation. The objective of this study was to compare the di...

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Autores principales: Idelevich, Pavel, Elkeles, Adi, Okon, Elimelech, Kristt, Don, Terkieltaub, Dov, Rivkin, Ilia, Bruchim, Ilan, Fishman, Ami
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2993652/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21070653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-1596-5-70
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author Idelevich, Pavel
Elkeles, Adi
Okon, Elimelech
Kristt, Don
Terkieltaub, Dov
Rivkin, Ilia
Bruchim, Ilan
Fishman, Ami
author_facet Idelevich, Pavel
Elkeles, Adi
Okon, Elimelech
Kristt, Don
Terkieltaub, Dov
Rivkin, Ilia
Bruchim, Ilan
Fishman, Ami
author_sort Idelevich, Pavel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A persistent goal of oncologic histochemistry is to microscopically identify neoplasia tinctorially. Consequently, the newly developed CellDetect(® )staining technology, that appears to exhibit this property, warrants clinical evaluation. The objective of this study was to compare the diagnostic results using CellDetect(® )to the outcomes of standard microscopic examination based on hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining for the recognition of different squamous epithelial phenotypes of the uterine cervix. METHODS: Pairs of adjacent sections were made from 60 cervical biopsy cases that were diagnosed originally as either normal or neoplastic (CIN, SCC). One section of the pair was stained for H&E; the second section, with CellDetect(®). Based on the examination of these pairs by two experienced pathologists, we investigated the following issues:(1) diagnostic agreement between the pathologists on each pair; (2) agreement between H&E and CellDetect(® )for each pair (3) tinctorial characteristics in micro-regions (n = 130) evaluated as either normal, reactive or neoplastic. RESULTS: Qualitatively, CellDetect(®)-stained preparations displayed cyto-morphological detail comparable to H&E images. Tinctorially, non-neoplastic cells appeared green/blue when stained withCellDetect(®), contrasting with cytologically neoplastic foci, where cells of every grade were red/magenta in color. Due to these tinctorial characteristics, even small foci of neoplasia could be readily distinguished that were inconspicuous on H&E at low magnification. In some instances, this prompted re-examination of the H&E and revision of the diagnosis. Quantitatively, we found that despite diagnostic variation between pathologists, in about 3% of the cases, each pathologist made the same diagnosis regardless of whether CellDetect(® )or H&E was used, i.e. there was 100% self-agreement for each pathologist between stains. Particularly noteworthy was the finding of a 0% false negative rate, coupled with a 10-15% false positive rate. Regarding specificity, the performance in reactive squamous processes was similar to that observed for morphologically normal squamous epithelium. CONCLUSIONS: In this first order assessment of clinical applicability, CellDetect(® )staining technology was at least comparable to results using H&E, and perhaps surperior. CellDetect(® )provided a uniquely useful tinctorial clue for the detection of neoplasia, which exhibited an impressive 0% false negative rate. A more extensive, blinded study is needed to confirm these promising findings.
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spelling pubmed-29936522010-11-30 Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia Idelevich, Pavel Elkeles, Adi Okon, Elimelech Kristt, Don Terkieltaub, Dov Rivkin, Ilia Bruchim, Ilan Fishman, Ami Diagn Pathol Research BACKGROUND: A persistent goal of oncologic histochemistry is to microscopically identify neoplasia tinctorially. Consequently, the newly developed CellDetect(® )staining technology, that appears to exhibit this property, warrants clinical evaluation. The objective of this study was to compare the diagnostic results using CellDetect(® )to the outcomes of standard microscopic examination based on hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining for the recognition of different squamous epithelial phenotypes of the uterine cervix. METHODS: Pairs of adjacent sections were made from 60 cervical biopsy cases that were diagnosed originally as either normal or neoplastic (CIN, SCC). One section of the pair was stained for H&E; the second section, with CellDetect(®). Based on the examination of these pairs by two experienced pathologists, we investigated the following issues:(1) diagnostic agreement between the pathologists on each pair; (2) agreement between H&E and CellDetect(® )for each pair (3) tinctorial characteristics in micro-regions (n = 130) evaluated as either normal, reactive or neoplastic. RESULTS: Qualitatively, CellDetect(®)-stained preparations displayed cyto-morphological detail comparable to H&E images. Tinctorially, non-neoplastic cells appeared green/blue when stained withCellDetect(®), contrasting with cytologically neoplastic foci, where cells of every grade were red/magenta in color. Due to these tinctorial characteristics, even small foci of neoplasia could be readily distinguished that were inconspicuous on H&E at low magnification. In some instances, this prompted re-examination of the H&E and revision of the diagnosis. Quantitatively, we found that despite diagnostic variation between pathologists, in about 3% of the cases, each pathologist made the same diagnosis regardless of whether CellDetect(® )or H&E was used, i.e. there was 100% self-agreement for each pathologist between stains. Particularly noteworthy was the finding of a 0% false negative rate, coupled with a 10-15% false positive rate. Regarding specificity, the performance in reactive squamous processes was similar to that observed for morphologically normal squamous epithelium. CONCLUSIONS: In this first order assessment of clinical applicability, CellDetect(® )staining technology was at least comparable to results using H&E, and perhaps surperior. CellDetect(® )provided a uniquely useful tinctorial clue for the detection of neoplasia, which exhibited an impressive 0% false negative rate. A more extensive, blinded study is needed to confirm these promising findings. BioMed Central 2010-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2993652/ /pubmed/21070653 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-1596-5-70 Text en Copyright ©2010 Idelevich et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Idelevich, Pavel
Elkeles, Adi
Okon, Elimelech
Kristt, Don
Terkieltaub, Dov
Rivkin, Ilia
Bruchim, Ilan
Fishman, Ami
Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title_full Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title_fullStr Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title_full_unstemmed Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title_short Novel dual-function CellDetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
title_sort novel dual-function celldetect(® )staining technology: wedding morphology and tinctorial discrimination to detect cervical neoplasia
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2993652/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21070653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-1596-5-70
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