Abstract

Diagnostic updates, an increased precision of tumor sub-type classification and the development of new diagnostic biomarkers (immunohistochemistry (IHC), Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and other molecular pathology techniques), have a significant impact on pathologists' management of tissue samples. The objective of this work was to test and validate the FISH technique on detached IHC slides. An IHC technique was first performed on 30 tissue samples. After detachment of the lamella, a FISH technique was then performed according to the usual protocol with a centromeric probe. A validation cohort (n=10) with duplicate testing using a traditional FISH technique and an IHC slide with a detached lamella was then carried out. Finally, a cohort of 20 "old" cases (IHC carried out over 2years ago) was also tested. Different types of probes (specific locus, break apart) have been used. All the slides were interpreted by a technician and a pathologist. Evaluation criteria were: the general interpretability of the slide; the percentage of labeled nuclei; intensity of the signal and the presence or absence of autofluorescence. FISH was interpretable in 100% of recently treated cases and 90% of "old" cases with a satisfactory intensity and a high percentage of labeled nuclei, without autofluorescence. The results of our study show that the reuse of IHC slides for performing FISH is a powerful means of economizing tissue samples, especially for small samples and in the absence of archived representative material.

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