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The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification

OBJECTIVES: Traditionally, differences in absolute numbers of cells expressing a certain marker (e.g., positive staining cells per mm(2)) have been used in immunohistological synovial tissue classification. We have begun to evaluate the relative composition of the inflammatory infiltrates, i.e. perc...

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Autores principales: Della Beffa, Cristina, Slansky, Elisabeth, Pommerenke, Claudia, Klawonn, Frank, Li, Jialiang, Dai, Lie, Schumacher, H. Ralph, Pessler, Frank
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3738641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23951325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072494
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author Della Beffa, Cristina
Slansky, Elisabeth
Pommerenke, Claudia
Klawonn, Frank
Li, Jialiang
Dai, Lie
Schumacher, H. Ralph
Pessler, Frank
author_facet Della Beffa, Cristina
Slansky, Elisabeth
Pommerenke, Claudia
Klawonn, Frank
Li, Jialiang
Dai, Lie
Schumacher, H. Ralph
Pessler, Frank
author_sort Della Beffa, Cristina
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Traditionally, differences in absolute numbers of cells expressing a certain marker (e.g., positive staining cells per mm(2)) have been used in immunohistological synovial tissue classification. We have begun to evaluate the relative composition of the inflammatory infiltrates, i.e. percentages of inflammatory cell types in inflammatory infiltrates, as an alternate classification tool that may potentially improve tissue diagnostics, subgrouping in clinical trials, and understanding of pathogenesis of inflammatory and noninflammatory arthropathies. METHODS: Synovial tissue specimens (normal synovium, n=15; orthopedic arthropathies, n=6; osteoarthritis, n=26; early undifferentiated arthritis, n=10; rheumatoid arthritis, n=26; chronic septic arthritis, n=11) were stained for CD15, CD68, CD3, CD20, and CD38. Densities of cells expressing a given marker were determined in the superficial subintima. Binary and multicategory receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis and naïve Bayes classifier were used to compare the abilities of (1) the absolute densities of cells expressing a given marker (absolute method) with (2) the percentages of these cells in the inflammatory cell population (relative method) to differentiate among the six tissue classes. RESULTS: The inflammatory infiltrates in normal synovium and the orthopedic arthropathies consisted almost exclusively of CD68+ and CD3+ cells. Notable fractions of CD20+ and CD38+ cells appeared in a subset of osteoarthritis samples, and increased further in early, rheumatoid and chronic septic arthritis. ROC analyses and naïve Bayes classifier ranked the absolute method above the relative method in terms of overall discriminatory ability. The relative method became slightly superior when the samples were also stratified according to the total number of inflammatory cells/mm(2). CONCLUSIONS: This exploratory investigation featuring a variety of joint disorders revealed that measuring the relative proportions of inflammatory cell types may aid in synovial tissue classification if the samples are also stratified according to the intensity of inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-37386412013-08-15 The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification Della Beffa, Cristina Slansky, Elisabeth Pommerenke, Claudia Klawonn, Frank Li, Jialiang Dai, Lie Schumacher, H. Ralph Pessler, Frank PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: Traditionally, differences in absolute numbers of cells expressing a certain marker (e.g., positive staining cells per mm(2)) have been used in immunohistological synovial tissue classification. We have begun to evaluate the relative composition of the inflammatory infiltrates, i.e. percentages of inflammatory cell types in inflammatory infiltrates, as an alternate classification tool that may potentially improve tissue diagnostics, subgrouping in clinical trials, and understanding of pathogenesis of inflammatory and noninflammatory arthropathies. METHODS: Synovial tissue specimens (normal synovium, n=15; orthopedic arthropathies, n=6; osteoarthritis, n=26; early undifferentiated arthritis, n=10; rheumatoid arthritis, n=26; chronic septic arthritis, n=11) were stained for CD15, CD68, CD3, CD20, and CD38. Densities of cells expressing a given marker were determined in the superficial subintima. Binary and multicategory receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis and naïve Bayes classifier were used to compare the abilities of (1) the absolute densities of cells expressing a given marker (absolute method) with (2) the percentages of these cells in the inflammatory cell population (relative method) to differentiate among the six tissue classes. RESULTS: The inflammatory infiltrates in normal synovium and the orthopedic arthropathies consisted almost exclusively of CD68+ and CD3+ cells. Notable fractions of CD20+ and CD38+ cells appeared in a subset of osteoarthritis samples, and increased further in early, rheumatoid and chronic septic arthritis. ROC analyses and naïve Bayes classifier ranked the absolute method above the relative method in terms of overall discriminatory ability. The relative method became slightly superior when the samples were also stratified according to the total number of inflammatory cells/mm(2). CONCLUSIONS: This exploratory investigation featuring a variety of joint disorders revealed that measuring the relative proportions of inflammatory cell types may aid in synovial tissue classification if the samples are also stratified according to the intensity of inflammation. Public Library of Science 2013-08-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3738641/ /pubmed/23951325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072494 Text en © 2013 Della Beffa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Della Beffa, Cristina
Slansky, Elisabeth
Pommerenke, Claudia
Klawonn, Frank
Li, Jialiang
Dai, Lie
Schumacher, H. Ralph
Pessler, Frank
The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title_full The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title_fullStr The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title_full_unstemmed The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title_short The Relative Composition of the Inflammatory Infiltrate as an Additional Tool for Synovial Tissue Classification
title_sort relative composition of the inflammatory infiltrate as an additional tool for synovial tissue classification
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3738641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23951325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072494
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