Background: Cytomorphological evaluation of tissue touch imprints during rapid on-site evaluation or intraoperative pathology consultation has crucial value. However, literature on their utility for molecular testing is limited. In this study, we emphasize a further benefit of touch imprint slides and scrutinize our institutional experience on their use in molecular testing, specifically next generation sequencing (NGS).
Materials And Methods: NGS-based reports (2019-2023) of Koç University Hospital were retrospectively analyzed and circumstances in which sequencing was conducted on touch imprint slides were retrieved (n = 18). Type/location of the biopsy, diagnosis, results, and quality metrics were recorded.
Results: Touch imprints were addressed when they harbored more neoplastic cells compared with permanent biopsies, when suboptimal fixation mitigated deoxyribonucleic acid/ribonucleic acid (DNA/RNA) yield in resections or when the sample was obtained from bone and required decalcification. Diagnoses were diverse, namely non-small-cell lung cancer, gastric adenocarcinoma, glial tumor, Ewing sarcoma, and carcinoma of unknown primary. The percentage of tumor cells on slides stretched between 15% and 70%. Molecular findings ranged from KRAS mutations to TRIM1::NTRK2 and EWSR::FLI1 fusions. For five cases, sequencing did not yield any alteration, one study was not completed because it did not yield high-quality RNA.
Conclusion: Touch imprint slides provide a reliable alternative, especially when neoplastic cells are scarce in permanent biopsies or decalcification deters nucleic acid quality. Based on our experience, we suggest making touch imprints on a routine basis, especially for every bone biopsy. Once digitally scanned duplicates are made, original slides can be safely used for DNA-/RNA-based molecular studies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dc.25283 | DOI Listing |
Diagnostics (Basel)
December 2024
Section Cytopathology, Institute of Pathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf UKE, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.
Major diagnostic and therapeutic changes led to the implementation of the 'lung cancer diagnosis in small biopsies and cytology specimens' concept in the WHO Classification of Tumours of the Lung, Pleura, Thymus and Heart in 2015. Touch imprints are an established technique in cytology that provides a rapid and minimally invasive method for morphological diagnoses of clinical specimens, accurate subtyping, and molecular characterizations of malignancies. The extended diagnostic requirements from the increasingly limited material provided by minimally invasive biopsy techniques pose major challenges for pathology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Rep (Hoboken)
October 2024
Department of Diagnostic Pathology, Kanazawa University Hospital, Kanazawa, Japan.
Adv Sci (Weinh)
November 2024
Micro- and Nano-technology Research Center, State Key Laboratory for Manufacturing Systems Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, 710049, China.
Flexible sensor arrays have attracted extensive attention in human-computer interaction. However, realizing high-performance sensor units with programmable properties, and expanding them to multi-pixel flexible arrays to maintain high sensing consistency is still struggling. Inspired by the contact behavior of octopus antenna, this paper proposes a programmable multistage dome structure-based flexible sensing array with robust sensing stability and high array consistency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cytol
July 2024
Department of Pathology, Burdwan Medical College, Burdwan, West Bengal, India.
Background: Touch imprint cytology (TIC) of core needle biopsy specimen is an easy method of rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) which aids in the rapid diagnosis of breast lumps by cytological analysis.
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of touch imprint cytology in predicting the adequacy of needle core biopsy of breast lumps and its diagnostic accuracy for malignancy.
Materials And Methods: This study was done in Burdwan Medical College over a period of two years on 80 patients who had presented with breast lumps and had given consent for core needle biopsy for diagnosis.
Diagn Cytopathol
January 2025
Department of Pathology, Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center, Shanghai, China.
Background: Whole-slide imaging (WSI) is a promising tool in pathology. However, the use of WSI in cytopathology has lagged behind that in histology. We aimed to evaluate the utility of WSI for the intraoperative touch imprint cytological diagnosis of axillary sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) in breast cancer patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!