Abstract
Nuclear size and shape are important components in the diagnosis of pathological specimens. However, a qualitative evaluation is typically applied rather than a quantitative evaluation technique. In the present study, we sought to evaluate the nuclear morphological characteristics of lung adenocarcinoma using whole-slide imaging (WSI) and computer-assisted image analysis (IA). We evaluated the nuclear characteristics of 106 cases of surgically resected lung adenocarcinoma according to Feulgen staining and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for the inner nuclear membrane protein emerin. According to the Feulgen reaction, although the nuclear area (size) of the carcinoma cells was correlated with the nuclear perimeter (NP) (R=0.8973), the nuclear staining intensity of carcinoma cells was not correlated with the nuclear area. Using emerin IHC, we used IA software that was able to detect both the NP and the emerin-stained nuclear membrane length (ENML) in the nucleus, and found that the more nuclei exhibited a longer ENML relative to the NP, the more nuclear grooves and intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions were present. In addition, the nuclear area was correlated with the percentage of nuclei that had a longer ENML compared to the NP against the total nuclei (R=0.7759). Furthermore, the emerin low expression group showed an enlarged nuclear area (P=0.0264), elongated NP (P=0.0091), and lower shape factor (P=0.0486) compared with the normal emerin expression group. Our data indicated the usefulness of WSI and IA for pathological specimen analysis. In addition, this study is the first to report that the low expression of emerin in cancer cell results in an oval shape of nuclei and nuclear enlargement in clinical samples.
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