0000000000416982

AUTHOR

Allen M. Gown

showing 4 related works from this author

Quantitative Evaluation of HER-2/neuStatus in Breast Cancer by Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization and by Immunohistochemistry With Image Analysis

2001

We correlated quantitative results obtained in 40 invasive breast cancer cases for HER-2 gene amplification by fluorescence in situ hybridization with protein expression by immunohistochemical studies with computer-assisted image analysis. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) results were quantified as the mean number of fluorescent signals per nucleus, and immunohistochemical slides were read by semiquantitatively assessing membranous immunostaining intensity in tumor cells vs nonneoplastic breast tissue or quantitatively evaluated by image analysis. We found high correlation between immunohistochemical results by semiquantitative scoring and by image analysis. FISH results correlated…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testMammary glandGeneral MedicineIn situ hybridizationBiologymedicine.diseaseStainingBreast cancermedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineCarcinomaImmunohistochemistryImmunostainingFluorescence in situ hybridizationAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology
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Assessment of proliferative activity in breast cancer: MIB-1 immunohistochemistry versus mitotic figure count.

1999

Abstract The proliferative activity is one of the most important single prognostic parameters in breast cancer diagnosis and the time-honored measure of proliferative activity, the mitotic figure count, is an integral component of most combined prognostic scores. The detection of the cell cycle-specific antigens Ki-67, and the development of anti-Ki-67 antibodies, including the paraffin-reactive antibody MIB-1, have established immunohistochemical detection of cell cycle-specific antigens as a measure of proliferative activity in breast cancer diagnosis. The current study was performed to correlate mitotic figure counts with the proliferative activity as assessed by MIB-1 immunohistochemist…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMitotic indexMammary glandBreast NeoplasmsPathology and Forensic MedicineBreast cancermedicineCarcinomaMitotic IndexHumansHigh-power fieldObserver VariationbiologyCarcinoma Ductal BreastNuclear ProteinsAntigens Nuclearmedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistrymedicine.anatomical_structureKi-67 AntigenKi-67biology.proteinMitotic FigureImmunohistochemistryCell DivisionHuman pathology
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Complete chromogen separation and analysis in double immunohistochemical stains using Photoshop-based image analysis.

1998

Simultaneous detection of two different antigens on paraffin-embedded and frozen tissues can be accomplished by double immunohistochemistry. However, many double chromogen systems suffer from signal overlap, precluding definite signal quantification. To separate and quantitatively analyze the different chromogens, we imported images into a Macintosh computer using a CCD camera attached to a diagnostic microscope and used Photoshop software for the recognition, selection, and separation of colors. We show here that Photoshop-based image analysis allows complete separation of chromogens not only on the basis of their RGB spectral characteristics, but also on the basis of information concernin…

0301 basic medicineHistologyChromatography030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyChemistryAnalytical chemistryAntigens Differentiation MyelomonocyticBreast NeoplasmsImmunohistochemistryActinsEpithelium03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyCarotid ArteriesChromogenic CompoundsAntigens CDImage Processing Computer-AssistedImmunohistochemistryHumansKeratinsVimentinAnatomyStromal CellsSoftwareThe journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society
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Cytokeratin 8 immunostaining pattern and E-cadherin expression distinguish lobular from ductal breast carcinoma.

2000

Immunohistochemistry using antibodies to cytokeratin 8 can serve as a valuable diagnostic tool for the differentiation of lobular from ductal carcinomas of the breast. In contrast with ductal carcinomas, which exhibit a peripheral-predominant immunostaining pattern, adjacent tumor cells “molding” to each other, lobular carcinomas exhibit a ring-like perinuclear immunostaining pattern, creating a “bag of marbles” appearance with neighboring tumor cells. This immunostaining pattern is stable even in the tumors that otherwise do not exhibit characteristic histomorphologic features (ie, solid or pleomorphic type of a lobular carcinoma) and tumors that mimic growth patterns characteristic of the…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyLobular carcinomaIntermediate FilamentsBreast NeoplasmsBiologyDiagnosis DifferentialImmunoenzyme TechniquesCytokeratinBreast cancerCarcinomamedicineHumansskin and connective tissue diseasesCell NucleusCarcinoma Ductal BreastGeneral MedicineDuctal carcinomamedicine.diseaseCadherinsDuctal Breast CarcinomaCarcinoma LobularInvasive lobular carcinomaKeratin 8KeratinsFemaleAmerican journal of clinical pathology
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