Abstract
This is the first comparative study of DNA quantification of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma by flow cytometry (FCM) and image cytometry (ICM) using formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue. The potential advantages of ICM include the identification of a reliable control cell population; avoidance of non-tumour stromal and inflammatory cell nuclei, nuclear fragments, degenerate cell nuclei and doublets, triplets etc., which are not possible with FCM using archival tissue. Twenty-eight cases, all of the same stage (stage 2a) and similar grade (well or moderately differentiated) were analysed. The cases were separated into two groups, those that had succumbed to tumour in less than 18 months (group A) and those that were tumour free at least 18 months post-resection (group B). Using ICM all 28 tumours yielded interpretable histograms by comparison to 25 of 28 using FCM. Aneuploidy was identified in 100% of cases in group A using ICM (in comparison to 73% by FCM) and in 73% of group B using ICM (in comparison to 44% by FCM). Any tumour aneuploid by FCM was also aneuploid by ICM. Nine cases aneuploid by ICM were euploid by FCM. The mean 5C exceeding rate (% of cells whose nuclei contain a DNA mass equivalent to > 5 sets of 23 chromosomes) was 21% in group A and 14% in group B (P < 0.01). Euploidy was confined to tumours of those patients disease free for more than 18 months. The conclusions of this study are that: firstly, ICM is superior in its yield of interpretable histograms to FCM using formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue; secondly, ICM is more sensitive in the identification of aneuploid stemlines than FCM; and thirdly, euploid tumours (as detected by ICM) appear to have a better prognosis than aneuploid tumours of similar stage and grade.
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