Abstract

Flow cytometry (FC) is assuming increasing importance in diagnosis in veterinary oncology. The European Canine Lymphoma Network (ECLN) is an international cooperation of different institutions working on canine lymphoma diagnosis and therapy. The ECLN panel of experts on FC has defined the issue of reporting FC on canine lymphoma and leukemia as their first hot topic, since a standardized report that includes all the important information is still lacking in veterinary medicine. The flow cytometry panel of the ECLN started a consensus initiative using the Delphi approach. Clinicians were considered the main target of FC reports. A panel of experts in FC was interrogated about the important information needed from a report. Using the feedback from clinicians and subsequent discussion, a list of information to be included in the report was made, with four different levels of recommendation. The final report should include both a quantitative part and a qualitative or descriptive part with interpretation of the salient results. Other items discussed included the necessity of reporting data regarding the quality of samples, use of absolute numbers of positive cells, cutoff values, the intensity of fluorescence, and possible aberrant patterns of antigen expression useful from a clinical point of view. The consensus initiative is a first step toward standardization of diagnostic approach to canine hematopoietic neoplasms among different institutions and countries. This harmonization will improve communication and patient care and also facilitate the multicenter studies necessary to further our knowledge of canine hematopoietic neoplasms. © 2016 International Clinical Cytometry Society.

Highlights

  • Flow cytometry (FC) is increasingly being used in veterinary clinical pathology laboratories owing to the increasing number of FC facilities, greater availability of specific antibodies labeled with different fluorochromes, and the rapidity with which results can be generated

  • The European Canine Lymphoma Network (ECLN) is a network that was created in 2009 with the aim of establishing cooperation among different institutions working on canine lymphoma diagnosis and therapy [11]

  • Most (51.7%) respondents reported requesting FC in more than 80% of lymphoma cases, and 17.2% of respondents reported requesting FC in more than 50% but less than 80% of lymphoma cases

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Summary

Introduction

Flow cytometry (FC) is increasingly being used in veterinary clinical pathology laboratories owing to the increasing number of FC facilities, greater availability of specific antibodies labeled with different fluorochromes, and the rapidity with which results can be generated. A useful FC report should contain all the appropriate information required by clinicians, provide improved characterization of the neoplastic disease, help determine therapy, and inform a monitoring strategy to enable early detection of relapse. This requires sufficient clarity of reporting to allow understanding by non-FC experts. An appropriate report should contain all necessary raw data and describe the strategies used to generate them This provides information about reproducibility and facilitates interpretation by other experts in second opinion or multicenter studies. The ECLN panel of experts on FC has defined the issue of reporting FC on canine lymphoma and leukemia as their first hot topic, since a standardized report that includes all the important information is still lacking in veterinary medicine

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