W e have read with interest the articles published in Cancer Cyto- pathology regarding the use of find-needle aspiration (FNA) specimens for gene expression profiling. [1][2][3] We agree that FNA may allow for the procurement of ample tissue for subsequent gene expression analysis and are optimistic
The feasibility of gene expression profiling generated in fine-needle aspiration specimens from patients with follicular lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
โ Scribed by Goy, Andre ;Stewart, John ;Barkoh, Bedia A. ;Remache, Yvonne K. ;Katz, Ruth ;Sneige, Nour ;Gilles, Frederic
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 708 KB
- Volume
- 108
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
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โฆ Synopsis
Lymphoma of germinal center cell (GC) origin generally is an indolent malignancy that transforms progressively into a more aggressive disease. According to the World Health Organization classification, lymphomas of follicular center cell origin are classified as either large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) or follicular lymphoma (FL).
The authors tested the feasibility of performing gene expression profiling using amplified RNA from fine-needle aspirates (FNA) obtained from lymph nodes.
Twenty-four samples from patients with a diagnosis of FL or LBCL were obtained after Institutional Review Board-approved informed consent was obtained. The diagnoses were confirmed by 2 pathologists and were classified into 2 groups (10 LBCL samples and 14 FL samples) by using conventional morphology and immunophenotyping. One hundred nanograms of total RNA were subjected to 2 cycles of standard, double-stranded complementary DNA synthesis and in vitro transcription for target amplification using a small-sample target-labeling protocol.
The biotinylated cRNA from each sample was hybridized to gene chips. Gene expression profiling results were analyzed first by principal-component analysis (PCA) by using a list of 146 probe sets that represented 62 genes that are characteristic of an activated B-cell (ABC) signature or a GC signature. The analysis identified 5 LBCL samples with an ABC cell signature. Using a list of 207 probe sets that represented 113 genes involved in FL transformation, PCA analysis identified 2 overlapping clusters corresponding to FL and GC-diffuse LBCL. To improve this classification further, the authors generated a list of 72 genes that were expressed differentially between FL and GC-LBCL. Using this list of genes, PCA analysis demonstrated a clear separation between FL and GC-LBCL. However, five FL samples clustered as an intermediate group between FL and GC-DLBCL. These samples were characterized morphologically by a mixed cell pattern with relatively fewer large, noncleaved lymphocytes and more small, cleaved lymphocytes. The results support the feasibility of FNA-based transcription profiles in patients with FL or LBCL, which, in combination with morphology and immunophenotyping, can help in the subtyping of these entities. Cancer (Cancer Cytopathol) 2006;108:10 -20.
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