Special techniques in histopathology
Many additional methods of tissue analysis are available to assist in diagnosis if routine processing and microscopy do not give a definitive answer.
- Staining
- Immunohistochemistry
- Electron microscopy
- Flow cytometry
- Cytogenetics
Special stains
Pathologists use the chemical properties of components of the tissues being studied in their choice of different stains. The stain(s) are applied to the thin sections on glass slides to allow the pathologist to see the cells under the microscope. The most widely used stain is haematoxylin and eosin. This stain is a combination of a basic stain (haematoxylin) and an acidic stain (eosin), which react with acidic and basic cell components on the slide to give purple and pink colours to the tissues. Other stains available highlight fats, different tissue fibres, different types of mucus, microorganisms, proteins etc.
Immunohistochemistry
A major change in histopathology in recent times has been the development of immunohistochemistry. Where special stains are a relatively crude and, in most cases, relatively non-specific way of staining tissue components, immunohistochemical stains are by comparison far more specific in what they stain.
This technique involves attaching a dye to an antibody that will only bind to a certain protein type on or within a cell. Antibodies are like keys that can only open a certain lock (cell protein or antigen). Hundreds of antibodies are available which allow labelling of hundreds or even thousands of different protein types. Where a special stain may allow the pathologist to identify, for example, a cell as being cancerous, immunohistochemistry can identify which organ in the body that cancerous cell came from and how aggressively it may behave.
The dyes that attach to the labelling antibody can be also altered, including using different coloured dyes or even fluorescent dyes that are easier to see on microscopy. Some laboratories can use fluorescence-labelled antibodies to allow for computerised slide analysis, reducing the time taken to examine large numbers of slides and identifying which slides need to be reviewed by a pathologist and which are within the normal range.
Electron microscopy
The usual microscopes used by pathologists are not powerful enough to see the smallest parts that make up a cell. This is not usually a problem, but some diseases can only be diagnosed at this subcellular level. Examples include types of kidney disease (glomerulonephritis) or aggressive cancers which lose their normal proteins, making immunohistochemistry less useful in their identification.
In these cases a very powerful type of microscope is used called the electron microscope. This utilises beams of electrons rather than visible light to magnify the cells in a tissue sample. It can magnify up to 2 million times, whereas the maximum power of a conventional light microscope is only 1 to 2 thousand times.
Flow cytometry
This technique is used most commonly as an adjunct in the diagnosis of cancers of the blood cells (leukaemias and myelomas). Cells are suspended in a liquid and passed through a laser beam (single wave length light beam). A detector measures how the beam is scattered and if fluorescent light is emitted from excited particles on the cells. This is interpreted by a computer as a number of cells/ particles/ proteins (whatever substance is being examined for) shown on a graph. This can be used to give the quantities and relative proportions of different types of cells in the blood and identify any abnormal cells (e.g. leukaemias).
Cytogenetics
With the explosion in information about cell DNA (the genetic coding material) and genes that has resulted since the completion of the Human Genome Project, increasing numbers of genes are being recognised that, if faulty, may be involved in the development of disease including cancers. This is shaping up to change the way that disease is thought of, diagnosed and treated.
Cytogenetics is an umbrella term for the analysis of the genetic material (chromosomes and their DNA) of cells, and is becoming an increasingly widely requested component of the pathology workup of a submitted tissue. Techniques used include staining chromosomes (the form in which DNA is found in the cell nucleus) to reveal areas where genes may have been deleted, duplicated or broken. Fluorescent labels can also be attached to specific DNA sequences (parts of specific genes) which allow faulty genes to be seen when examining the cells under a special type of microscope. Direct sequencing of cell DNA is not routinely done for medical purposes at the present time.
As an example of the usefulness of cytogenetics one can look at breast cancer. Anatomical pathology can give a diagnosis of what type of breast cancer a patient may have, how far it has spread, whether or not it is likely to be an aggressive tumour and whether it will respond to hormone therapy. Cytogenetics can add to this information by identifying whether the patient has a faulty gene(s) which predisposed them to the development of breast cancer. If present, this would mean that they have an increased chance of developing cancer in the opposite breast and of developing other specific cancer types (e.g. ovarian cancer). It also has implications for the patient’s direct relatives and offspring. Did they inherit the faulty gene(s) and what are the chances that they will develop cancer in the future? There are also treatments being developed which will target the products of specific gene mutations in a patient.