| Literature DB >> 35729220 |
Balazs Acs1,2,3, Samuel C Y Leung4, Kelley M Kidwell5, Indu Arun6, Renaldas Augulis7, Sunil S Badve8, Yalai Bai9, Anita L Bane10, John M S Bartlett11,12, Jane Bayani11, Gilbert Bigras13, Annika Blank14,15, Henk Buikema16, Martin C Chang17, Robin L Dietz18, Andrew Dodson19, Susan Fineberg20, Cornelia M Focke21, Dongxia Gao4, Allen M Gown22, Carolina Gutierrez23, Johan Hartman24,25, Zuzana Kos26, Anne-Vibeke Lænkholm27, Arvydas Laurinavicius7, Richard M Levenson28, Rustin Mahboubi-Ardakani28, Mauro G Mastropasqua29, Sharon Nofech-Mozes30, C Kent Osborne23, Frédérique M Penault-Llorca31,32, Tammy Piper12, Mary Anne Quintayo11, Tilman T Rau14,33, Stefan Reinhard14, Stephanie Robertson24,25, Roberto Salgado34,35, Tomoharu Sugie36, Bert van der Vegt16, Giuseppe Viale29,37, Lila A Zabaglo38, Daniel F Hayes39, Mitch Dowsett38, Torsten O Nielsen4, David L Rimm40.
Abstract
Ki67 has potential clinical importance in breast cancer but has yet to see broad acceptance due to inter-laboratory variability. Here we tested an open source and calibrated automated digital image analysis (DIA) platform to: (i) investigate the comparability of Ki67 measurement across corresponding core biopsy and resection specimen cases, and (ii) assess section to section differences in Ki67 scoring. Two sets of 60 previously stained slides containing 30 core-cut biopsy and 30 corresponding resection specimens from 30 estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer patients were sent to 17 participating labs for automated assessment of average Ki67 expression. The blocks were centrally cut and immunohistochemically (IHC) stained for Ki67 (MIB-1 antibody). The QuPath platform was used to evaluate tumoral Ki67 expression. Calibration of the DIA method was performed as in published studies. A guideline for building an automated Ki67 scoring algorithm was sent to participating labs. Very high correlation and no systematic error (p = 0.08) was found between consecutive Ki67 IHC sections. Ki67 scores were higher for core biopsy slides compared to paired whole sections from resections (p ≤ 0.001; median difference: 5.31%). The systematic discrepancy between core biopsy and corresponding whole sections was likely due to pre-analytical factors (tissue handling, fixation). Therefore, Ki67 IHC should be tested on core biopsy samples to best reflect the biological status of the tumor.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35729220 PMCID: PMC9514990 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-022-01104-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 8.209
Fig. 1Study design.
Thirty patients of ER-positive breast cancer were enrolled comprising 15 cases from UK and 15 cases from Japan. Corresponding core-cut biopsy and surgical resection blocks were centrally cut two adjacent sections per case and stained with Ki67. Seventeen pathologists from 15 countries were given 60 slides (30 Core cut biopsy slides and 30 surgical resection specimen slides) of Ki67 to score.
Fig. 2Digital Image Analysis.
Representative pictures of digital image analysis (DIA) masks on a resection specimen (A, B) and a core biopsy case (C, D). Blue corresponds to Ki67 negative tumor cells, red indicates Ki67 positive tumor cells, green indicates stromal cells and purple marks immune cells. Black corresponds to necrosis and yellow marks other detections (false cell detections, noise).
Fig. 3Between-(consecutive) section difference in Ki67 scoring.
Bland–Altman plot comparing Ki67 scores between consecutive sections (A). Orange dashed line corresponds to the expected mean zero difference between Ki67 scores of the two sections. Red line represents the observed mean difference between Ki67 scores of the two sections, namely the observed bias (red dashed lines are the CI of the observed mean difference). Blue lines illustrate the range of agreement (lower and upper limit of agreement) based on 95% of differences (blue dashed lines are the CI of the limits of agreement). Black line is the fitted regression line to detect potential proportional error (black dashed lines are the CI of the regression line). B represents the scatter plot with fitted regression between the Ki67 scores of the two consecutive sections.
Fig. 4Between-specimen (CB vs resection specimen) difference in Ki67 scoring.
Bland–Altman plot comparing Ki67 scores between specimens (A). Orange dashed line corresponds the expected mean zero difference between Ki67 scores of the two sections. Red line represents the observed mean difference between Ki67 scores of the two sections, namely the observed bias (red dashed lines are the CI of the observed mean difference). Blue lines illustrate the range of agreement (lower and upper limit of agreement) based on 95% of differences (blue dashed lines are the CI of the limits of agreement). Black line is the fitted regression line to detect potential proportional error (black dashed lines are the CI of the regression line). B shows the distributions of Ki67 scores of the two specimens. The bottom/top of the boxes represent the first (Q1)/third (Q3) quartiles, the bold line inside the box represents the median and the two bars outside the box represent the lowest/highest datum still within 1.5× the interquartile range (Q3–Q1). C represents the scatter plot with fitted regression between the Ki67 scores of the two specimens.
Fig. 5Between-specimen (CB vs resection specimen) difference in Ki67 scoring by case and by origin of the cases.
A represents cases collected in the United Kingdom with representative Ki67 IHC images of corresponding CB and resection specimens. B represents cases collected in Japan with representative Ki67 IHC images of corresponding CB and resection specimens. The bottom/top of the boxes represent the first (Q1)/third (Q3) quartiles, the bold line inside the box represents the median and the two bars outside the box represent the lowest/highest datum still within 1.5× the interquartile range (Q3–Q1). Outliers are represented with circles, extreme outliers with asterisk.