Abstract

The advent of "omics" technologies for high-depth tumor profiling has provided new information regarding cancer heterogeneity. However, a bulk omics profile can only partially reproduce tumor complexity, and it does not meet the preferences of pathologists used to perform an in situ assessment of marker expression, for instance, with immunohistochemistry. The NanoString GeoMx® Digital Spatial Profiler (DSP) is a platform for morphology-guided multiplex profiling of tissue slides, which allows the digital quantification of target analytes in different neoplastic settings. To illustrate the feasibility and opportunities offered by DSP from a pathologist's perspective, we applied DSP in three different representative neoplastic settings: breast carcinoma, thyroid anaplastic carcinoma, and biphasic mesothelioma. Because of the perfect overlap between the hematoxylin-eosin-stained slide and the GeoMx areas of interest, in breast carcinoma, two different antibodies allowed the distinction of the tumor cells from the surrounding tumor microenvironment. In biphasic mesothelioma, we could distinguish the epithelioid from the sarcomatoid neoplastic component, and in the thyroid, we easily separated the anaplastic areas from the well-differentiated carcinoma. DSP is a promising tool that combines traditional histological evaluation, allowing spatial assessment of a tumor and its surroundings, and innovative in situ digital profiling. Pathologists should not miss the opportunity to combine morphological and genomic analyses and be at the forefront of investigating the progression of dysplasia/neoplasia, low-grade or high-grade, epithelial/mesenchymal, and, more in general, overcoming the concept of in situ vs. bulk genomic methods.

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