Immunohistochemistry - Undifferentiated Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four main applications of immunocytochemistry

A

Cell biology - cell cycle, apoptosis, cell differentiation and classificatin

Haematology - leukaemia ID

Immunology - autoimmune disease, immune cell function and distribution

Cell path/ clin cyt - tumour characterisation, microbe detection

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2
Q

Write about autoimmune disease investigation

A

Identify bound auto-antibodies and immune
complexes – Tissue sample stained by direct
immunofluorescence
* Pernicious anaemia
* Primary biliary cirrhosis
* Skin – bullous blistering disorders
* Kidney - glomerulonephritis

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3
Q

Write about immunostaining in cytology

A
  • Smears, Cytospins
  • Fix in alcohol
  • Immunostain using polymer-based automated staining
  • Develop chromogen [depending on label]
  • Counterstain with haematoxylin
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4
Q

How can IHC be used in tumour characterisation

A

Diagnostic
* Identification of Cell Type
* Histogenicity

Prognostic-
* Biomarkers of grade, growth, genetic aberrations
[oncogenes, Tumour suppressor genes]

Therapeutic
* Biomarkers related to susceptibility to targeted therapy

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5
Q

Write about differentiation

A
  • In biology, describes the processes by which immature cells become mature cells with specific functions.
  • In cancer, this describes how much or how little tumour tissue looks like the normal tissue it came from.
  • Well-differentiated cancer cells look more like normal cells and tend to grow and spread more slowly than poorly differentiated or undifferentiated cancer cells.
  • Differentiation is used in tumour grading systems, which are different
    for each type of cancer.
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6
Q

Write about patients with poorly differentiated tumours

A

Patients with poorly differentiated carcinoma account for
approximately 20% of patients with carcinoma of an unknown
primary site
* an additional 10% of patients have poorly differentiated
adenocarcinoma

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7
Q

Write about tumour heterogeneity

A

Describes the observation that different tumour cells can show distinct morphological and phenotypic profiles

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8
Q

What six markers make up the markers involved in an undifferentiated tumour panel

A

Cytokeratin - epithelial tumours
CD45 - Lymphomas - common leucocyte antigen

Vimentin - connective tissue tumours - Sarcoma

S100 - melanomas

Neuron-specific enolase - neural derived tumours

Desmin - muscle cell tumours

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9
Q

Write about tumour subtyping

A
  • Once cell category is identified tumour is subtyped
  • Cytokeratin positive – Epithelial cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma;
    could be from many sites
  • CD45 positive – could be one of 20+ different lymphomas
  • Vimentin positive – could be 30+ different tumour types
  • Second panel of primary antibodies applied to find out exact cell type
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10
Q

Write about liver tumours

A
  • Liver very rarely has primary tumours
  • Tumour sheds cells of to mestasisies -> blood brought to the liver
  • Cancerous cells grow in the liver
  • Do hep par if primary liver tumour
  • If not primary do a CK 7 or CK20
    o If both positive its pancreatic
    o If CK20 its colon
    o If CK7 its breast or ovarian
    o If CK19 its pancreatic
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11
Q

What are the subclassifications of adenocarcinoma

A

Ductal
Lobular
Medullary
Tubular
Mucinous
Papillary
Apocrine

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12
Q

Classify breast adenocarcinomas

A

Adenocarcinoma in situ
Invasive adenocarcinoma

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13
Q

Write about immunohistochemistry of skin

A

Viral antigen detection
- Herpes simplex I or II
- Human herpes virus B

Tumour typing = cell typing by antigen expression

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14
Q

What are the 5 tumour classes

A
  • 1.Melanocyte/Melanoma markers -
    HMB45, S100, Melan-A,Tyrosinase
    1. Epithelial cell tumours – Cytokeratins [AE1/AE3 or MNF]
    1. Langerhans cells – CD1a
    1. Merkel cells – Neuron Specific Enolase, Cytokeratin 20
  • 5.Lymphomas, CD45, CD3 – T cell lymphoma
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15
Q

Write about melanoma

A

Skin, Eye, Acral <400 cases p.a
* Legs - female, Trunk - male

Mostly due to sun exposure
* Sunbeds also associated with raised risk

Commonly from pre-existing moles

Removal by excision – sample for histology
* Cytology – FNA of organs invaded by melanoma cells

Various types:
* Superficial spreading, Nodular, Amelanotic
* Vascular spread to brain, lungs, LN

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16
Q

Write about melanoma investigation

A

H+E, Immunostaining, Molecular analysis

Antibodies used in melanoma immunostaining: S100, HMB45, Tyrosinase,
MelanA

17
Q

Classify lymphoma

A

Hodgkins lymphom
Non Hodgkins lymphoma

18
Q

Write aboubt hodkgins lymphoma

A

Reed sternberg cells

19
Q

Write about Non-Hodgkins lymphoma

A
  • Classification based on cell type, location, phenotype

B-lymphocyte

T-lymphocyte

Low grade / High grade

Specific type – depending on location and cell type:
* Follicular, Mantle cell, Anaplastic
* Nodal, Extra-nodal, Cutaneous, Enteropathy-associated

20
Q

Write about immunohistochemistry of CD45

A

Hodgkins lymphoma – Reed Sternberg cells
* CD15, CD30

Non-Hodgkins lymphomas
* T lymphocyte lymphoma
* CD3, CD45RO

B-lymphocyte lymphoma
* CD20, CD79a

21
Q

Write about Hodgkin’s lymphoma

A

~1% of all malignancies in Western world
Bimodal age incidence
* First peak at 20-30 years
* Second peak over 50 years
Lymphadenopathy affects cervical (neck) nodes in 60% of cases
~145 cases in Ireland p.a, 60% in under 50s

22
Q

Write about Reed-Sternberg cells

A
  • Hodgkin’s cells -Large mononuclear cells with prominent
    nucleolus and abundant cytoplasm,
  • Reed-Sternberg cells - Bi-lobed nucleus (mirror image) or multi-lobed nuclei with prominent nucleoli [20-50μm]

Background cell population dependent on subtype
- Mixed cellularit - eosinophils, plasma cells
- Nodular sclerosing - collagen bands

23
Q

Write about the diagnosis of Hodgkin’s lymphoma

A
  • Morphology – RS, Hodgkins cells
  • Immunophenotype – CD15, CD30 positive
  • Also IHC + - MUM1, PAX5 proteins
  • 50% have EBV in RS cells
  • Staging – dependant on how many lymph nodes position and
    regions of body affected
  • Treatment – Radiation, Chemotherapy and/or stem cell
    transplantation
  • Survival – >84% 5 year survival
24
Q

Write about non-Hodkins Lymphoma

A
  • 2-3% of all malignancies in developed countries
  • Wide Spectrum of neoplasms
  • Often have widespread disease on presentation
  • Vary from indolent to aggressive tumours
  • Low-grade or high-grade
  • May arise in Lymph nodes or lymphoid tissue
    throughout body (GIT, Skin, Brain etc.)
25
Q

Write about lymphoma immunophenotyping

A
  • CD45 – most lymphomas are positive
  • CD15 and CD30 - Hodgkins lymphomas
  • CD20+, CD79a+ - B lymphocyte NHL
  • CD3+, CD43+ – T lymphocyte NHL
  • CD30 – Hodgkins and Anaplastic Large Cell NHL
  • Specific markers – each lymphoma has its own
    diagnostic profile
26
Q

Write about lymphadenopathy

A
  • Tumours commonly spread to adjacent lymphatics
  • Lymph Node status is a key indicator of prognosis and survival for cancer
    sufferers
  • First line investigation may be FNA cytology
  • Accuracy of FNA in metastatic disease is high
  • Lymphadenopathy can be first indication of a malignancy
27
Q

Write about sentinel lymph nodes

A
  • Sentinel – standing, watching
  • Sentinel LN - most important LN – node adjacent/closest to
    malignant tumour
  • Highly indicative of stage or spread of the cancer
28
Q

Write about breast cancer - axillary lymph nodes

A

If sentinel node is positive for breast cancer , may have axillary nodes
removed or more aggressive therapy

29
Q

Write about metastatic deposits in lymph nodes

A
  • Local or distant spread
  • Identification of primary on morphology and
    immunocytochemistry
  • Any cell types other than lymphocytes in LN indicates
    metastatic disease
  • Micrometastases – small clusters or single cells
30
Q

Write about common metastatic tumours found in LN

A

Squamous cell carcinoma
* Lung – mediastinal lymph nodes
Adenocarcinoma
* Breast
* Lung
* Gastric / GI tract
* Ovarian
* Prostate
Melanoma

31
Q

Write about soft tissue tumours

A

Subtyping, Vimentin positive

  • Desmin – muscle tumours
  • Smooth muscle actin – smooth muscle tumours
  • CD31 – Endothelial tumours
  • CD99 – Ewings sarcoma
32
Q

Write about Ewings Sarcoma

A
  • a primary malignant small round cell tumour of bone and soft tissue