| Literature DB >> 33598043 |
Vinod B Shidham1, Lester J Layfield2.
Abstract
The interpretation of results on immunostained cell-block sections has to be compared with the cumulative published data derived predominantly from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections. Because of this, it is important to recognize that the fixation and processing protocol should not be different from the routinely processed FFPE surgical pathology tissue. Exposure to non-formalin fixatives or reagents may interfere with the diagnostic immunoreactivity pattern. The immunoprofile observed on such cell-blocks, which are not processed in a manner similar to the surgical pathology specimens, may not be representative resulting in aberrant results. The field of immunohistochemistry (IHC) is advancing continuously with the standardization of many immunomarkers. A variety of technical advances such as multiplex IHC with refined methodologies and automation is increasing its role in clinical applications. The recent addition of rabbit monoclonal antibodies has further improved sensitivity. As compared to the mouse monoclonal antibodies, the rabbit monoclonal antibodies have 10 to 100 fold higher antigen affinity. Most of the scenarios involve the evaluation of coordinate immunostaining patterns in cell-blocks with relatively scant diagnostic material without proper orientation which is usually retained in most of the surgical pathology specimens. These challenges are addressed if cell-blocks are prepared with some dedicated methodologies such as NextGen CelBloking™ (NGCB) kits. Cell-blocks prepared by NGCB kits also facilitate the easy application of the SCIP (subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern) approach for proper evaluation of coordinate immunoreactivity. Various cell-block and IHC-related issues are discussed in detail. ©2021 Cytopathology Foundation Inc, Published by Scientific Scholar.Entities:
Keywords: CMAS; Cell block; Cell-block; Cellblock; IHC; Immunohistochemistry; Monograph; SCIP approach; SOCP NextGen CelBloking; Shidham method; Standard optimum cell-block protocol; Subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern
Year: 2021 PMID: 33598043 PMCID: PMC7881511 DOI: 10.25259/Cytojournal_83_2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytojournal ISSN: 1742-6413 Impact factor: 2.091
Figure 1:Four micron thick sections with same cells for subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern (©vshidham reproduced from Ref #7).
Figure 2:Subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern approach (SCIP) (©vshidham reproduced from Ref #7).
Figure 3:Cell-blocking and AV marker–subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern approach (SCIP). Identical orientation of all sections on glass slides with proper labeling of their exact sequence in relation to each other.
Figure 4:Subtractive coordinate immunoreactivity pattern (SCIP) in cell-block section. Metastatic adenocarcinoma (cell-block sections of pleural fluid. History of triple-negative infiltrating duct carcinoma). Follow the neoplastic cells (arrows) (a) in serial sections to evaluated coordinate immunoreactivity pattern for at least two positive and two negative lineage-specific immunomarkers. The tumor cells (arrows) in dual color immunostained section are immunoreactive for BerEP4 (brown) and non-immunoreactive for vimentin (red) (b). They are also immunoreactive for cytokeratin 7 (c) with nuclear immunoreactivity for GATA3 (d). They are nonimmunoreactive for calretinin (a few adjacent reactive mesothelial cells are immunoreactive) (e) and cytokeratin 20 (f).
Figure 5:Immunomorphological patterns of some common immunomarkers (×, the immunomorphology of the immunomarker).
Figure 7:(a) Pancytokeratin immunoreactivity pattern (pleural fluid). Reactive mesothelial cells with cytoplasmic immunostaining (arrow in inset). Some reactive mesothelial cells may show a concentric immunostaining pattern around the nucleus better appreciated by adjusting fine focus. (b and c) HBME-1 immunoreactivity pattern (epithelioid mesothelioma, pleural fluid). Mesothelioma cells with membranous (arrow in a) and cytoplasmic immunostaining. Note the microvilli (arrowhead in b). (d and e) Calretinin immunoreactivity pattern (epithelioid mesothelioma, pleural fluid). Mesothelioma cells (arrow in a) show nuclear (arrowhead 1) immunoreactivity usually with cytoplasmic immunostaining (arrowhead 2) imparting the so-called “fried-egg” appearance (©vshidham reproduced from Ref #7).
Figure 8:Sample SOCP in cytology report highlighting important details about the cell-block (reproduced from open access publication, ref #1). (see also Table 6).
Recommended to include standardized optimum cell-block processing (SOCP) details in cytology report (reproduced from Ref. 1). (see also Figure 8).
| Every cytology report on cytology specimens with cell-block should have following minimum details communicated in it under gross description section or other designated section such as quality details |
Figure 9:Dual color immunostaining (vimentin: Red, BerEP4: Brown) (Pleural effusion fluid with history of mammary carcinoma). All the usual components of effusion fluids (reactive mesothelial cells and inflammatory cells) are immunoreactive for vimentin (red). Second foreign population is highlighted and easily detectable as vimentin non-immunoreactive component, consistent with metastatic tumor cells. In the adult population, most of these are metastatic adenocarcinoma which are usually immunoreactive for BerEP4 with cytoplasmic and membranous immunostaining (brown). (Red arrows show vimentin immunoreactive red immunostained mesothelial cells and inflammatory cells as usual components of effusion fluids. Brown arrows show BerEP4 immunoreactive brown immunostained second foreign population of adenocarcinoma cells.).
Significant vimentin immunoreactivity patterns.
BerEP4 immunoreactivity in various tumors.[
| Immunoreactive | Non-immunoreactive |
|---|---|
| Adenocarcinomas (most, 50–100% in various studies) | Mesothelioma* |
However, 4–26% of mesotheliomas may show BerEP4 immunoreactivity (which is usually membranous with microvillous pattern, in contrast to the cytoplasmic and membranous pattern in non-mesothelial tumors). Due to this, lack of immunoreactivity for BerEP4 favor mesotheliomas in malignant clinical setting. However, this non-immunoreactivity should be applied with an appropriate immunopanel (to discriminate mesothelioma from other metastases in serous effusions): At least two immunoreactive mesothelial immunomarkers (such as calretinin, vimentin, cytokeratin 7, and WT1) with at least two non-mesothelial immunomarkers (such as BerEP4, B72.3, and relevant lineage-specific immunomarker in particular clinical scenario such as lung primary)
Algorithmic immunohistochemical analysis of undifferentiated carcinomas.[
| Metastatic carcinoma (SCIP approach) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Broad categorization based on: Carcinoma: PanCytokeratin + | |||
AdCa: Adenocarcinoma, Ca: Carcinoma, GCT: Germ cell tumor, HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma, mCEA: Monoclonal carcinoembryonic antigen, NE: Neuroendocrine, pCEA: Polyclonal carcinoembryonic antigen, pVHL: von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor, RCC: Renal cell carcinoma, S100P: Placental S100, SmCC: Small cell carcinoma (3); SqCC: Squamous cell carcinoma; reproduced after some modifications from open access publication – Bahrami et al. Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. 2008, 132, 326–348[
Lineage-specific immunomarkers (modified from 43).
| Lineage category and subtypes | Immunomarkers |
|---|---|
| Lung adenocarcinoma | TTF-1, Napsin A |
| Breast carcinoma | GATA3, ER, GCDFP-15, Mamaglobin |
| Ovarian serous carcinoma | PAX-8, ER, WT1, vimentin |
| Ovarian clear cell carcinoma | pVHL, HNF-1B, KIM-1, PAX-8 |
| Endometrial adenocarcinoma | PAX-8/PAX-2, ER, vimentin |
| Endocervical adenocarcinoma | PAX-8, p16, CEA, HPV |
| Thyroid follicular cell origin | TTF-1, PAX-8, thyroglobulin |
| Thyroid medullary carcinoma | Calcitonin, TTF-1, mCEA, chromogranin |
| Salivary duct carcinoma | GATA3, AR, GCDFP-15, HER2 |
| Renal cell carcinoma, clear cell type | PAX-8/PAX-2, RCCma, pVHL, KIM-1 |
| Papillary renal cell carcinoma | P504S, RCCma, pVHL, PAX 8, KIM-1 |
| Translocation renal cell carcinoma | TFE3 |
| Upper gastrointestinal tract | CDH17, CDX2, CK20 |
| Lower gastrointestinal tract | SATB2, CDX2, CK20, CDH17 |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Arginase-1, CISH for albumin mRNA, Bile canalicular pattern (pCEA, CD10) |
| Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma | pVHL, CAIX |
| Pancreas, acinar cell carcinoma | Trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, elastase, BCL10 |
| Pancreas, ductal adenocarcinoma | MUC 5AC, CK17, Maspin, S100, IMP3 |
| Pancreas, neuroendocrine tumor | PR, PAX-8, PDX1, CDH17, islet-1 |
| Pancreas, solid pseudopapillary tumor | Nuclear beta-catenin, vimentin, E-cadherin-Neg, PR, CD10 |
| Prostate, adenocarcinoma | NKX3.1, PSA, PSAP, ERG |
| Urothelial carcinoma | GATA3, uroplakin II, S100P, CK5/6, p63, CK20 |
| Adrenal cortical neoplasm | SF-1, Mart-1, inhibin-a, calretinin |
| Seminoma | SALL4, LIN28, OCT4, CD117, D2-40 |
| Yolk sac tumor | SALL4, LIN28, glypican-3, AFP |
| Embryonal carcinoma | SALL4, LIN28, OCT4, NANOG, CD30, SOX2 |
| Choriocarcinoma | GATA3, b-HCG, CD10 |
| Sex cord stromal tumor | SF-1, inhibin-a, calretinin, FOXL2 |
| Thymic origin | PAX-8, p63, CD5 |
| Gastrointestinal stromal tumor | CD117, DOG1, PGDFRA |
| Solitary fibrous tumor | STAT6, CD34, Bcl2, CD99 |
| Vascular tumor | ERG, CD31, CD34, Fli-1 |
| Synovial sarcoma | TLE1, CK, nuclear beta-catenin |
| Chordoma | CK, S100, Brachyury |
| Desmoplastic small round cell tumor | CK, CD99, desmin, WT1 (N-terminus) |
| Alveolar soft part sarcoma | TFE3 |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | Myogenin, desmin, MyoD1 |
| Smooth muscle tumor | SMA, MSA, desmin, calponin |
| Ewing sarcoma/PNET | NKX2.2, CD99, Fli-1 |
| Myxoid and round cell liposarcoma | NY-ESO-1 |
| Low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma | MUC4 |
| Epithelioid sarcoma | CD34, loss of INI1 |
| Atypical lipomatous tumor | MDM2 (MDM2 by FISH is a more sensitive and specific test), CDK4 |
| Langerhans cell Histiocytosis | CD1a, S100, Langerin (CD207) |
| Angiomyolipoma | HMB-45, SMA, Mart-1 (S100 non-immunoreactive) |
| Myoepithelial carcinoma | Cytokeratin and myoepithelial markers (may lose INI1) |
| Myeloid sarcoma | CD43, CD34, MPO |
| Follicular dendritic cell tumor | CD21, CD35 |
| Merkel cell carcinoma | CK20 (paranuclear dot staining), MCPyV |
| Mesothelial origin | Calretinin (nuclear), WT1, D2-40, CK5/6, mesothelin, CK7, vimentin |
| Neuroendocrine origin | Chromogranin, synaptophysin, CD56 |
| Mast cell tumor | CD117, tryptase |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | p40, CK5/6, p63, SOX2 |
| Melanoma | S100, Mart-1, tyrosinase, HMB-45, MiTF, SOX10, PNL2 |
Some therapy and prognosis-related immunomarkers*.
| Immunomarker | Remark |
|---|---|
| Estrogen receptor (ER) | The ER and PR status should be tested on the primary tumor and/or metastases for all newly diagnosed invasive breast cancer or recurrence |
| Progesterone receptor (PR) | |
| HER2/neu (ERBB2; c-erbB-2; erb-b2 receptor tyrosine kinase 2; human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) | For application of HER2-targeted therapy |
| CD117 | Majority of GISTs overexpress CD117 (c-KIT) and |
| DOG1 | |
| PGDFRA | |
| SDHB | |
| EGFR | EGFR is highly expressed in a variety of solid malignant tumors (including non-small cell lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, breast cancer, medullary thyroid cancer, salivary gland carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, colorectal cancer, chordoma, and malignant gliomas) and its expression has been correlated with disease progression and poor survival |
| p16 | p16 immunohistochemistry for risk stratification in oropharyngeal SCC with significantly better outcome of p16-positive oropharyngeal SCC than for p16 negative tumors[ |
| p40 | Thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF1) and p40 (an isoform of p63) are immunomarkers for adenocarcinoma (ADC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) respectively for objective categorization (especially in cases with solid/squamoid morphology which may be misclassified as SCC with therapy (with bevacizumab) related potentially lethal pulmonary hemorrhage[ |
| TTF1 | |
| p53 | p53 is altered gene in human cancers in approximately 50% of all invasive tumors. The most difficult-to-treat cancers (such as high-grade serous ovarian cancers, triple-negative breast cancers, esophageal cancers, small-cell lung cancers and squamous cell lung cancers) show p53 mutation in at least 80% of cases |
| Ki67 | For grading of neuroendocrine tumors, GIST, pheochromocytoma, lymphoma |
| Ber-EP4 | Cases with metastasis of Ber-EP4 immunoreactive (epithelial cell adhesion molecule -positive tumors) may be treated with intraperitoneal catumaxomab antibody[ |
| MMR proteins (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2) | To identify patients at risk for |
| PDL1 | Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies that target either PD-1 or PD-L1 have been FDA approved for use in various malignancies (including metastatic melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), renal cell carcinoma, bladder cancer, head and neck cancer, Merkel cell carcinoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, gastric cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, and microsatellite instability-high cancer regardless of histology). Approval is pending in other diseases |
Qualitative and quantitative integrity of the tumor cells in cell-blocks (and surgical pathology specimens) is more critical than routine application of immunohistochemistry
Figure 10:Membranous microvillus immunostaining pattern (cytokeratin 7, ×100 zoomed) (©vshidham reproduced from Ref #7).
Figure 11:Pleural fluid, negative for malignant cells (history breast carcinoma) immunostained with SCIP approach. (a) The cell-block section showed vimentin immunoreactive (red cytoplasmic) mixed inflammatory cells admixed with a few reactive mesothelial cells (which were immunoreactive for cytokeratin 7 (b). These cells were immunoreactive for calretinin). Some focal areas (arrows in a and c) may appear to be non-immunoreactive for vimentin (without immunoreactivity for BerEP4, GATA3, and estrogen receptor) if evaluated casually. However, on careful morphological examination at higher magnification, these may be lymphocytes with scant cytoplasm (arrow in f) with scant red vimentin immunoreactivity or other inflammatory cells (arrowhead in f) with some focal vimentin immunoreactivity (d-f). (a, c through f) Dual color vimentin (red cytoplasmic) with BerEP4 (brown cytoplasmic). (b) Cytokeratin 7 (a and b: ×10; c: ×20; d: ×100 oil; e and f: Zoom of d).
Figure 12:The specimens may be divided into various categories (reproduced from open access publication, ref #1).