Background and Study Aims: Histopathological examination for superficial gastrointestinal
lesions has been mainly based upon the light microscopic examination of thin-slice
specimens with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. However, it takes at least a
couple of days to create a slide-glass for microscopic study. In order to obtain immediate
microscopic images for untreated specimens, the authors used laser-scanning confocal
microscopy (LCM) to study fresh samples of gastrointestinal mucosa.
Materials and Methods: Fresh untreated mucosal specimens from the esophagus, stomach,
and colon, obtained by endoscopic pinch biopsy, polypectomy, or endoscopic mucosal
resection (EMR), were fixed in normal saline and examined by LCM collecting the reflective
light of a 488-nm wavelength argon laser beam. Findings from the LCM image were compared
with those of conventional H&E staining in all specimens. For objective evaluation
of the similarity of both pictures, the nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio (N/C) of normal
mucosa and that of cancer of the esophagus were calculated and statistically analyzed.
The overall diagnostic accuracy for cancer was evaluated.
Results: The average scanning time to obtain the LCM image of a specimen was 1.6 seconds.
The LCM images acquired corresponded well to the conventional H&E light microscopic
images in the esophagus, stomach, and colon. Cell wall, nucleus, cytoplasm, and tissue
structural elements were simultaneously visualized by LCM scanning. A difference in
N/C ratios between normal mucosa and cancer in the esophagus was statistically apparent
when Welch's test (P = 0.05) was applied. The overall diagnostic accuracy of the LCM
study for cancer was 89.7 %.
Conclusions: This novel method enables us to obtain an immediate serial virtual microscopic
section through a fresh specimen, which has not actually been cut, although the resolution
of the image obtained is still limited. These early results encourage us to develop
imaging relevant to conventional histopathology alongside the development of LCM technology
in the near future. We should aim at the in vivo application of LCM coupled to probes
which can be introduced through the working channel of endoscopes.
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H. Inoue, M.D.
First Dept. of Surgery Tokyo Medical and Dental University
1-5-45 Yushima Bunkyo-ku Tokyo 113-8519 Japan
Fax: Fax:+ 81-3-3817-4126
Email: E-mail: hiro.inoue.srg1@med.tmd.ac.jp