Abstract

Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (chRCC) are relatively common tumors that can have significant risk for mortality. Treatment and prognostication in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are dependent upon correct histologic typing. ccRCC and chRCC are generally straightforward to diagnose based on histomorphology alone. However, high-grade ccRCC and chRCC can sometimes resemble each other morphologically, particularly in small biopsies. Multiple immunostains and/or colloidal iron stain are sometimes required to differentiate the two. Imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) allows simultaneous spatial mapping of thousands of biomarkers, using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections. In this study, we evaluate the ability of IMS to differentiate between World Health Organization/International Society for Urological Pathology grade 3 ccRCC and chRCC. IMS spectra from a training set of 14 ccRCC and 13 chRCC were evaluated via support vector machine algorithm with a linear kernel for machine learning, building a classification model. The classification model was applied to a separate validation set of 6 ccRCC and 6 chRCC, with 19 to 20, 150-μm diameter tumor foci in each case sampled by IMS. Most evaluated tumor foci were classified correctly as ccRCC versus chRCC (99% accuracy, kappa=0.98), demonstrating that IMS is an accurate tool in differentiating high-grade ccRCC and chRCC.

Highlights

  • Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is among the top 10 most commonly diagnosed malignancies, with approximately 64,000 new cases in the United States and 400,000 new cases worldwide in 2018.1,2 Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common histological subtype, accounting for 75% of cases; approximately 5% of RCCs are chromophobe type.[1]

  • One chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (chRCC) was subsequently excluded from analysis due to technical difficulty, so only 19 chRCC were used for analysis (Tables 1 and 2)

  • The classification model was tested on 19 to 20 foci from each tumor in the validation set of 6 Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and 6 chRCC; each focus was individually classified as ccRCC or chRCC by the Imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) classification model (Table 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is among the top 10 most commonly diagnosed malignancies, with approximately 64,000 new cases in the United States and 400,000 new cases worldwide in 2018.1,2 Clear cell RCC (ccRCC) is the most common histological subtype, accounting for 75% of cases; approximately 5% of RCCs are chromophobe type (chRCC).[1] Morphologic distinction between low-grade Nucleolar grades 1–2) ccRCC and chRCC is usually straightforward. Received for publication February 11, 2020; accepted May 13, 2020.

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