| Literature DB >> 26546480 |
Jun Moriya1, Mishie Ann Tanino2, Tomoko Takenami1, Tomoko Endoh1, Masana Urushido1, Yasutaka Kato1, Lei Wang3, Taichi Kimura3, Masumi Tsuda1, Hiroshi Nishihara3, Shinya Tanaka1,3.
Abstract
The role of intraoperative pathological diagnosis for central nervous system (CNS) tumors is crucial for neurosurgery when determining the surgical procedure. Especially, treatment of carmustine (BCNU) wafers requires a conclusive diagnosis of high-grade glioma proven by intraoperative diagnosis. Recently, we demonstrated the usefulness of rapid immunohistochemistry (R-IHC) that facilitates antigen-antibody reaction under alternative current (AC) electric field in the intraoperative diagnosis of CNS tumors; however, a higher proportion of water and lipid in the brain parenchyma sometimes leads to freezing artifacts, resulting in poor quality of frozen sections. On the other hand, squash smear preparation of CNS tumors for cytology does not affect the frozen artifacts, and the importance of smear preparation is now being re-recognized as being better than that of the tissue sections. In this study, we established the rapid immunocytochemistry (R-ICC) protocol for squash smears of CNS tumors using AC electric field that takes only 22 min, and demonstrated its usefulness for semi-quantitative Ki-67/MIB-1 labeling index and CD 20 by R-ICC for intraoperative diagnosis. R-ICC by AC electric field may become a substantial tool for compensating R-IHC and will be applied for broad antibodies in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system (CNS) tumor; Immunocytochemistry (ICC); Immunohistochemistry (IHC); Intraoperative diagnosis; Squash smear
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26546480 DOI: 10.1007/s10014-015-0238-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Tumor Pathol ISSN: 1433-7398 Impact factor: 3.298