Effect of freezing on histologic grading of invasive ductal breast cancer.
: Kronqvist, Kuopio, Collan
: 2003
: Analytical and Quantitative Cytology and Histology
: Analytical and quantitative cytology and histology
: Anal Quant Cytol Histol
: 25
: 1
: 47
: 52
: 6
: 0884-6812
To quantify the histologic changes caused by freezing during tissue processing and their influence on histologic malignancy grading as a prognostic factor in invasive ductal breast cancer.\nWe studied frozen and nonfrozen formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples of 18 cases of invasive ductal breast cancer. Features associated with histologic malignancy grading of breast cancer--i.e., nuclear pleomorphism, mitotic index and tubular differentiation--were assessed by quantitative morphometric methods.\nIn our material, frozen samples consistently had a smaller mean nuclear profile area than nonfrozen samples (mean difference, 32%). Frozen nuclei were also clearly less symmetric and uniform in shape than non-frozen nuclei. Moreover, frozen samples had consistently higher mitotic indices than nonfrozen samples (mean difference, 66%, with the standardized mitotic index). Tubular differentiation, as expressed in fraction of fields with tubular differentiation, increased by 16% as a result of sample freezing.\nAccording to our results of morphometric measurement in invasive ductal breast cancer, great caution should be exercised when prognostic conclusions are based on frozen tissue samples.\nOBJECTIVE\nSTUDY DESIGN\nRESULTS\nCONCLUSION