Combining Multiplex Immunohistochemistry with Computer-Aided Topographical and Single-Cell Analysis to Investigate the Mechanism of Spontaneous Regression in a Case of Metastatic Congenital Neuroblastoma

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Gray JC ◽  
Dalia Hammouche ◽  
Easton AS ◽  
Lopez MA ◽  
Taylor J ◽  
...  

This is a description of a novel combination of chromogenic multiplex immunohistochemistry, digital pathology, computer-aided cell detection and topographical analysis of tumor tissue to allow a detailed study of the immune infiltrate. This is applied to a rare clinical case, where a tumor sample is available from an infant with metastatic neuroblastoma at the point of spontaneous regression. This allowed detailed analysis of the immune infiltrate, including spatial distribution and phenotype of lymphoid and myeloid populations, with a distinction between heterogeneous areas within the intra- and extra- tumoral immune microenvironments. The mechanism of spontaneous regression in congenital neuroblastoma is poorly understood, but the data obtained suggested an immune-mediated phenomenon, characterised by an adaptive T cell driven response with a significant delayed-type hypersensitivity (granulomatous) component.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachita Panda ◽  
Fernanda Vargas E Silva Castanheira ◽  
Jared Schlechte ◽  
Bas GJ Surewaard ◽  
Hanjoo Brian Shim ◽  
...  

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a life-threatening syndrome of respiratory failure and diffuse alveolar damage that results from dysregulated local and systemic immune activation, causing pulmonary vascular, parenchymal and alveolar damage. SARS-CoV-2 infection has become the dominant cause of ARDS worldwide, and emerging evidence implicates neutrophils and their cytotoxic arsenal of effector functions as central drivers of immune-mediated lung injury in COVID-19 ARDS. However, a key outstanding question is whether COVID-19 drives a unique program of neutrophil activation or effector functions that contributes to the severe pathogenesis of this pandemic illness, and whether this unique neutrophil response can be targeted to attenuate disease. Using a combination of high-dimensional single cell analysis and ex vivo functional assays of neutrophils from patients with COVID-19 ARDS compared to non-COVID ARDS (caused by bacterial pneumonia), we identified a functionally distinct landscape of neutrophil activation in COVID-19 ARDS that was intrinsically programmed during SARS-CoV-2 infection. Furthermore, neutrophils in COVID-19 ARDS were functionally primed to produce high amounts of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Surprisingly, this unique pathological program of neutrophil priming escaped conventional therapy with dexamethasone, thereby revealing a promising target for adjunctive immunotherapy in severe COVID-19.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1043-1054 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leeor Langer ◽  
Yoav Binenbaum ◽  
Leonid Gugel ◽  
Moran Amit ◽  
Ziv Gil ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Marek Kowal ◽  
Paweł Filipczuk

Abstract Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women. The effectiveness of treatment depends on early detection of the disease. Computer-aided diagnosis plays an increasingly important role in this field. Particularly, digital pathology has recently become of interest to a growing number of scientists. This work reports on advances in computer-aided breast cancer diagnosis based on the analysis of cytological images of fine needle biopsies. The task at hand is to classify those as either benign or malignant. We propose a robust segmentation procedure giving satisfactory nuclei separation even when they are densely clustered in the image. Firstly, we determine centers of the nuclei using conditional erosion. The erosion is performed on a binary mask obtained with the use of adaptive thresholding in grayscale and clustering in a color space. Then, we use the multi-label fast marching algorithm initialized with the centers to obtain the final segmentation. A set of 84 features extracted from the nuclei is used in the classification by three different classifiers. The approach was tested on 450 microscopic images of fine needle biopsies obtained from patients of the Regional Hospital in Zielona Góra, Poland. The classification accuracy presented in this paper reaches 100%, which shows that a medical decision support system based on our method would provide accurate diagnostic information.


2015 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 2420-2429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Secher ◽  
Delphine Payros ◽  
Camille Brehin ◽  
Michele Boury ◽  
Claude Watrin ◽  
...  

The intestinal barrier controls the balance between tolerance and immunity to luminal antigens. When this finely tuned equilibrium is deregulated, inflammatory disorders can occur. There is a concomitant increase, in urban populations of developed countries, of immune-mediated diseases along with a shift inEscherichia colipopulation from the declining phylogenetic group A to the newly dominant group B2, including commensal strains producing a genotoxin called colibactin that massively colonized the gut of neonates. Here, we showed that mother-to-offspring early gut colonization by colibactin-producingE. coliimpairs intestinal permeability and enhances the transepithelial passage of luminal antigen, leading to an increased immune activation. Functionally, this was accompanied by a dramatic increase in local and systemic immune responses against a fed antigen, decreased regulatory T cell population, tolerogenic dendritic cells, and enhanced mucosal delayed-type hypersensitivity response. Conversely, the abolition of colibactin expression by mutagenesis abrogates the alteration of oral tolerance induced by neonatal colonization byE. coli. In conclusion, the vertical colonization byE. coliproducing the genotoxin colibactin enhances intestinal translocation and subsequently alters oral tolerance. Thus, early colonization byE. colifrom the newly dominant phylogenetic group B2, which produces colibactin, may represent a risk factor for the development of immune-mediated diseases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenbo Ren ◽  
Edmund Y. Lam ◽  
Jianlin Zhao

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A50-A50
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Pacia ◽  
Xun Li ◽  
Ju Young Kim ◽  
Evelyn Diaz ◽  
Beiru Chen ◽  
...  

BackgroundMultiplex fluorescence immunohistochemistry (mFIHC) enables simultaneous detection of multiple biomarkers on a single tissue section. Spatial patterns and differential expression of immune- and tumor cell biomarkers serve as powerful predictors of immunotherapies. In a recent meta-analyses of 8135 patients treated with PD1/L1 pathway blockers, mFIHC was found to provide highest predictive power (P<0.05) amongst commonly utilized biomarker modalities, namely, PD-L1 IHC, Tumor Mutation Burden and Gene Expression Profiling alone. [Lu et al., JAMA Oncol 2019]. As biomarkers in mFIHC assays are read by computer-aided algorithms, the role of pathologists in the digital workflow has been debated. Utilizing clinical cases representing multiple tumor indications, we illustrate the critical collaboration between pathologists (human intelligence, HI) and computer workflows (artificial intelligence, AI) required for accurate interpretation of mFIHC assays in cancer immunotherapy trials.MethodsIn our clinical trial laboratory, pathologists are involved in pre-analytical, analytical and post-analytical phases of clinical trial sample testing. In the pre-analytical phase, pathologist(s) perform histological examination of H&E stained tissue sections to annotate and confirm tissue types, diagnosis, tissue integrity and acceptance (including viable tumor component), followed by determination of Region of Interest (ROI) for subsequent analysis by computerized programs. In the analytical phase, pathologists identify specific areas of biological and/or clinical interest within ROI (tumor, non-tumor, invasive margin, and tumor-stromal interphase) in the computer scans, as well as exclude ROI containing necrosis, hemorrhage, blood vessels, and autofluorescence. Those pathologist-selected images are then quantified by digital pathology software such as Automated QUantitative Analyses (AQUA®) technology. Finally, pathologists also provide interpretation and summarize findings relevant to the clinical study during the post-analytical phase.ResultsCase studies representing distinct malignancies, such as melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, illustrating the role of pathologists and especially in rescuing challenging cases and interpreting biomarkers scores from mFIHC assays will be presented.ConclusionsWith the advancement in technologies to detect increasing number of biomarkers in a single tissue section and accompanied growth of mFIHC assays in immuno-oncology studies, there is a clear transition from conventional pathology (HI) to computer-aided pathology (AI+HI) that will ultimately ensure greater accuracy, reproducibility and standardization of clinical trial testing, and enable approval of more effective therapies and better patient care.


The Lancet ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 356 (9246) ◽  
pp. 1985-1986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinhard Höpfl ◽  
Kurt Heim ◽  
Neil Christensen ◽  
Klaus Zumbach ◽  
Ulrike Wieland ◽  
...  

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