Abstract
In diagnostic evaluation of effusions, difficulties are encountered when atypical reactive mesothelial cells have to be differentiated from malignant cells. We tested the impact of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to identify metastatic cells in breast cancer effusions by detection of numerical chromosomal changes. Pleural and ascitic fluid samples (n=57) from 41 breast cancer patients were concomitantly evaluated by routine cytology and FISH, using centromere-specific probes representing chromosomes 7, 11, 12, 17 and 18. After setting stringent cut-off levels deduced from non-malignant control effusions (n=9), the rates of cells with true aneuploidy were determined in each effusion sample from breast cancer patients. The occurrence of aneuploid cells, as detected by FISH and indicative of malignancy, was correlated with the cytological findings. Routine cytology revealed malignancy in 60% of effusions. Using FISH, aneuploid cell populations could be observed in 94% of cytologically positive and in 48% of cytologically negative effusions, thus reverting diagnosis to malignancy. To confirm malignancy in cases with a low frequency of aneuploid cells, two-colour FISH was additionally performed and indeed showed heterogeneous chromosomal aneuploidy within single nuclei. We conclude that FISH is a valuable tool in the diagnosis of malignancy and may serve as an adjunct to routine cytological examination, as demonstrated here for breast cancer effusions.
Highlights
The aim of this study was to test the usefulness of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) as a complementary diagnostic tool for detection of malignant cells
Fifty-seven consecutive effusion specimens (34 pleural and 23 ascitic) from 41 breast cancer patients and nine effusions from patients with non-malignant disease were subjected to routine diagnostic evaluation and to FISH studies using centromeric probes for five chromosomes
To confirm diagnosis of malignancy in the five effusions with aneuploidy rates below 5%, two-colour FISH was performed
Summary
The aim of this study was to test the usefulness of FISH as a complementary diagnostic tool for detection of malignant cells
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