Identity Testing in Cervical Carcinoma in Case of Suspected Mix-Up
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in International Journal of Gynecological Pathology
- Vol. 19 (4) , 387-389
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004347-200010000-00016
Abstract
The histopathologic diagnosis is the cornerstone of modern oncology. But mix-ups of specimens can occur at any stage. The resection of a 1.2 cm polypoid cervical mass in a 25-year-old woman showed a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma prospectively staged as T1b1 (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics IB1). Even after complete embedding and serial sectioning of the whole cervix of the hysterectomy specimen after radical hysterectomy, only adenocarcinoma in situ, but no invasive tumor, was seen. To exclude a mix-up of the specimens, identity testing of the paraffin-embedded material was performed by microsatellite analysis. For both materials, we established identical results after testing the microsatellite loci HumTH01, HumVWA, HumFGA, HumACTBP2, HumF13B, and HumD8S1132. The resulting probability of identity came to 99.9999%, excluding a mix-up of the specimens. Archival paraffin-embedded specimens can be used to establish identity and can prevent the wrong patient from having major surgery.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The new biology: histopathologyThe Lancet, 1999
- Errors in histopathology reporting: detection and avoidanceHistopathology, 1999
- Clonality Analysis Using X-Chromosome Inactivation at the Human Androgen Receptor Gene (HUMARA): Evaluation of Large Cohorts of Patients With Chronic Myeloproliferative Diseases, Secondary Neutrophilia, and Reactive ThrombocytosisAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1999
- Field cancerization, clonality, and epithelial stem cells: the spread of mutated clones in epithelial sheetsThe Journal of Pathology, 1999
- How shall we apply the new biology to diagnostics in surgical pathology?The Journal of Pathology, 1999
- Tetranucleotide STR system D8S1132: sequencing data and population genetic comparisons.International journal of legal medicine, 1998
- Identifizierung von Gewebsproben bei Verdacht auf MaterialvertauschungDer Pathologe, 1997
- DNA Repeats -- A Treasury of Human VariationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Tetranucleotide repeat polymorphism at the human alpha fibrinogen locus (FGA)Human Molecular Genetics, 1992
- Tetranucleotide repeat polymorphism at the human beta-actin related pseudogene H-beta-Ac-psi-2 (ACTBP2)Nucleic Acids Research, 1992