A comparison of flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry in human colorectal cancers

In human colorectal cancer it has been reported that some tumours lack the HLA‐ABC antigens. This has been interpreted as reflecting tumour escape from the immune system. Earlier data have been obtained by immunohistochemistry. In this study, we compared the expression of HLA‐ABC, HLA‐DR, CD80 (B7–1...

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Veröffentlicht in:APMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica et immunologica Scandinavica microbiologica et immunologica Scandinavica, 1998-01, Vol.106 (1-6), p.562-570
Hauptverfasser: DIEDERICHSEN, AXEL COSMUS PYNDT, HANSEN, TINE PLATO, NIELSEN, OLE, FENGER, CLAUS, JENSENIUS, JENS CHRISTIAN, CHRISTENSEN, PER BORUP, KRISTENSEN, TOM, ZEUTHEN, JESPER
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In human colorectal cancer it has been reported that some tumours lack the HLA‐ABC antigens. This has been interpreted as reflecting tumour escape from the immune system. Earlier data have been obtained by immunohistochemistry. In this study, we compared the expression of HLA‐ABC, HLA‐DR, CD80 (B7–1) and CD54 (ICAM‐1) in 20 tumours using both a conventional immunohistochemistry two‐layer technique and multiparameter flow cytometry, gating on an epithelial cell marker. Colorectal cancer tissue used in flow cytometry was dissociated with collagenase, deoxyribonuclease and hyaluronidase. The intensity of expression of HLA‐ABC, HLA‐DR and CD80 was unaffected by the enzymes, but CD54 was decreased by 30%. The reproducibility of flow cytometry was good. Microscopy of sections revealed that about 5% of each tumour sample consisted of normal epithelium, but even after correction for this, flow cytometry was superior to immunohistochemistry in 33 out of 80 cases, and showed that tumours described as HLA‐ABC negative by immunohistochemistry were in fact weakly positive for HLA‐ABC. We conclude that flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry are complementary, and that flow cytometry is superior to immunohistochemistry for detecting anti‐gens/epitopes present in low amounts.
ISSN:0903-4641
1600-0463
DOI:10.1111/j.1699-0463.1998.tb01385.x