RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-24 Thread Godfrey Guerzon

This is my understanding about this CAP checklist item - 

CAP is looking for 2 types of negative controls:

1. Negative reagent control - this is satisfied by running a negative control 
slide from the same patient block through the whole process without the primary 
antibody.

2.  Negative tissue control - this is satisfied by running a slide of multi 
tissue control containing tissues that are positive for the primary antibody 
and tissues that are negative for the primary antibody.  The negative tissue on 
the multi tissue control will serve as the negative tissue control  for the 
specific antibody.  If you look at the positive control and the patient tissue 
only the areas that contain the target antigen will stain.  There are other 
elements in the tissue that are known negative (e.g. smooth muscle in the small 
blood vessels will not stain with CD3 - then the smooth muscle in either the 
positive control and the patient tissue would serve as an internal negative 
tissue control for CD3).  This negative result on the tissue elements that are 
expected not to stain with a specific antibody should be negative - hence - 
negative tissue control and should be noted in the documentation (preferably in 
the final report when commenting on the results of IHC stains).

At Emory, we just had our CAP inspection (we only had a couple of deficiencies 
- xylene monitoring in the IHC area,  Space and one corrected on site - 
labeling of chemicals without manufacturer's supplied expiration dates).  Prior 
to inspection, we got clarification from CAP on this checklist item.  CAP 
prefers the use of multi tissue control (containing both positive and negative 
tissue elements), however using negative tissue elements in the positive 
control and patient tissue are acceptable as negative tissue control for the 
specific antibody and it should be noted / documented accordingly.  We document 
the negative control in our final reports when commenting on the results of IHC 
stains.

This is my two cents contribution to the discussion.

Godfrey




> From: jshea...@roadrunner.com
> To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 21:11:01 -0400
> Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
> 
> Curt is right, according to CAP ...
> 
> ANP.22570 QC - Antibodies Phase II
> 
> Appropriate negative controls are used.
> 
> NOTE: Negative controls must assess the presence of nonspecific staining in 
> patient tissue as well
> 
> as the specificity of each antibody. Results of controls must be documented, 
> either in internal
> 
> laboratory records, or in the patient report. A statement in the report such 
> as, "All controls show
> 
> appropriate reactivity" is sufficient.
> 
> A negative reagent control is used to assess nonspecific or aberrant staining 
> in patient tissue related
> 
> to the antigen retrieval conditions and/or detection system used. A separate 
> section of patient tissue
> 
> is processed using the same reagent and epitope retrieval protocol as the 
> patient test slide, except
> 
> that the primary antibody is omitted, and replaced by any one of the 
> following:
> 
> ? An unrelated antibody of the same isotype as the primary antibody (for 
> monoclonal
> 
> primary antibodies)
> 
> ? An unrelated antibody from the same animal species as the primary antibody 
> (for
> 
> polyclonal primary antibodies)
> 
> ? The negative control reagent included in the staining kit
> 
> ? The diluent/buffer solution in which the primary antibody is diluted
> 
> In general, a separate negative reagent control should be run for each block 
> of patient tissue being
> 
> immunostained; however, for cases in which there is simultaneous staining of 
> multiple blocks from
> 
> the same specimen with the same antibody (e.g. cytokeratin staining of 
> multiple axillary sentinel
> 
> lymph nodes), performing a single negative control on one of the blocks may 
> be sufficient provided
> 
> that all such blocks are fixed and processed identically. This exception does 
> not apply to stains on
> 
> different types of tissues or those using different antigen retrieval 
> protocols or antibody detection
> 
> systems. The laboratory director must determine which cases will have only 
> one negative reagent
> 
> control, and this must be specified in the department's procedure manual.
> 
> The negative reagent control would ideally control for each reagent protocol 
> and antibody retrieval
> 
> condition; however, large antibody panels often employ multiple antigen 
> retrieval procedures. In
> 
> such cases, a reasonable minimum control would be to perform the negative 
> reagent control using
> 
> the most aggressive retrieval procedure in th

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Liz Chlipala
No problem Amos, I have a one page handout that I use for workshops and
presentations on how to do the math on this, it can be tricky, so if
anyone is interested just e-mail me.  Since we are talking about matched
isotype negative controls, essentially three things need to be taken
into consideration:

 

1.  The isotype of the primary antibody
2.  The protein concentration of the working dilution of the primary
antibody
3.  The antibody form - (affinity purified, culture supernatant,
ascities fluid, etc.) the isotype negative control needs to match the
primary antibody - some spec sheets list appropriate isotype negative
control reagents some do not

 

There is one caveat that I would like to address for those that are
working with animal tissues - you need to check the spec sheet on your
negative control reagents to make sure that it does not cross react with
the species you are working with.  If it does then you may get staining
in your negative control slide.

 

Here is a table that was generated from one of the older versions of the
dako handbook that addresses the antibody form and suggested negative
control reagents.

 

Primary Antibody Type

Suggested Negative Control Reagent

Monoclonal Mouse - produced in ascites

Antibody produced in ascites, same isotype as the primary antibody  OR

Normal nonimmune mouse serum

Monoclonal Mouse -

produced in tissue culture

Antibody produced in tissue culture, same isotype as the primary
antibody

Polyclonal Rabbit or Goat - immunoglobulin fraction

Normal rabbit or goat immunoglobulin fraction

Solid-phase absorbed Polyclonal Rabbit - immunoglobulin fraction

Rabbit immunoglobulin fraction - solid phase absorbed

Polyclonal Rabbit - whole serum 

Normal or nonimmune rabbit serum, whole serum

 

Hope this helps, and everyone have a great weekend

 

Liz

 

Elizabeth A. Chlipala, BS, HTL(ASCP)QIHC

Manager

Premier Laboratory, LLC

PO Box 18592

Boulder, Colorado 80308

office (303) 682-3949 

fax (303) 682-9060

www.premierlab.com

 

 

Ship to Address:

1567 Skyway Drive, Unit E

Longmont, Colorado 80504

-Original Message-
From: Amos Brooks [mailto:amosbro...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 3:05 PM
To: Liz Chlipala
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

 

Thanks Liz,
 You are absolutly right there, but have you ever noticed some folks
eyes glaze over when you say that they must both be run at the same
ug/mL? I would be lying if I said it never happened to me until I forced
myself to work it out. Once you do though it isn't too bad.
Unfortunately people don't think about this much. They want to put a
slide on a machine and walk away without thinking about what they are
doing. I guess I was oversimplifying the description. Thanks for
pointing that out as it is actually an important aspect to the
dilutions.

Amos

On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Liz Chlipala 
wrote:

Amos

Isotype negative controls are based upon protein concentration not
dilution.  They must be the same protein concentration of the primary
antibody at the dilution you are using.  Using the same dilution will
not work unless both stock solutions (primary antibody and isotype
control) are at the same protein concentration which is rarely the case.

Liz

Elizabeth A. Chlipala, BS, HTL(ASCP)QIHC
Manager
Premier Laboratory, LLC
PO Box 18592
Boulder, Colorado 80308
office (303) 682-3949  
fax (303) 682-9060  
www.premierlab.com


Ship to Address:
1567 Skyway Drive, Unit E
Longmont, Colorado 80504

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Amos
Brooks
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 2:16 PM
To: jm.lapoi...@accellab.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu

Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Hi,
This is simply a question of definitions. They are actually both
right.
If you have the patient tissue as a negative control you are not using
the
primary antibody on it but are replacing it (ideally) with an Ig with
the
same isotype AND dilution (universal negative is stupid). So if your
primary
is an IgG1 from a mouse and you use it at 1:100, your negative control
would
be a non-immune mouse serum IgG1 diluted to 1:100. Running this on
unrelated
material will not show you anything in this case. what it will show you
is
that the detection system you are using is specific to the antibody you
put
on the tissue and not to A) something else in the tissue or B) something
on
the Ig that is not the epitope itself.
Although, If you run the same primary antibody on tissue that you
expect will not react with the primary antibody, this would prove that
the
antibody reaction is specific to the antigenin question. This does raise
the
question of what to do about ubiquitous antigens (like ubiquitin) that
are
actually everywhere. Every cell has a cell cycle so they will all at one
poi

Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Amos Brooks
Thanks Liz,
 You are absolutly right there, but have you ever noticed some folks
eyes glaze over when you say that they must both be run at the same ug/mL? I
would be lying if I said it never happened to me until I forced myself to
work it out. Once you do though it isn't too bad. Unfortunately people don't
think about this much. They want to put a slide on a machine and walk away
without thinking about what they are doing. I guess I was oversimplifying
the description. Thanks for pointing that out as it is actually an important
aspect to the dilutions.

Amos

On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 4:25 PM, Liz Chlipala  wrote:

> Amos
>
> Isotype negative controls are based upon protein concentration not
> dilution.  They must be the same protein concentration of the primary
> antibody at the dilution you are using.  Using the same dilution will
> not work unless both stock solutions (primary antibody and isotype
> control) are at the same protein concentration which is rarely the case.
>
> Liz
>
> Elizabeth A. Chlipala, BS, HTL(ASCP)QIHC
> Manager
> Premier Laboratory, LLC
> PO Box 18592
> Boulder, Colorado 80308
> office (303) 682-3949
> fax (303) 682-9060
> www.premierlab.com
>
>
> Ship to Address:
> 1567 Skyway Drive, Unit E
> Longmont, Colorado 80504
>
> -Original Message-
> From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> [mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Amos
> Brooks
> Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 2:16 PM
> To: jm.lapoi...@accellab.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
>
> Hi,
> This is simply a question of definitions. They are actually both
> right.
> If you have the patient tissue as a negative control you are not using
> the
> primary antibody on it but are replacing it (ideally) with an Ig with
> the
> same isotype AND dilution (universal negative is stupid). So if your
> primary
> is an IgG1 from a mouse and you use it at 1:100, your negative control
> would
> be a non-immune mouse serum IgG1 diluted to 1:100. Running this on
> unrelated
> material will not show you anything in this case. what it will show you
> is
> that the detection system you are using is specific to the antibody you
> put
> on the tissue and not to A) something else in the tissue or B) something
> on
> the Ig that is not the epitope itself.
> Although, If you run the same primary antibody on tissue that you
> expect will not react with the primary antibody, this would prove that
> the
> antibody reaction is specific to the antigenin question. This does raise
> the
> question of what to do about ubiquitous antigens (like ubiquitin) that
> are
> actually everywhere. Every cell has a cell cycle so they will all at one
> point or another show proliferation or degeneration for example. Does
> this
> mean you don't run a negative control? No you need to look at it in the
> perspective of expected results.
> There are various ways of using negative (and positive) controls.
> It
> would actually be cost prohibitive to run ALL the possible positive and
> negative controls for every test that we as histologists do. We need to
> discuss with our pathologists what they want to have done to give them
> the
> confidence in our testing to support their diagnosis. But remember that
> just
> because another lab and another pathologist does it differently doesn't
> mean
> it is wrong. It's just different.
>
> Happy Friday Folks,
> Amos
>
>
> Message: 5
> Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 13:25:49 -0400
> From: "Jean-Martin Lapointe" 
> Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
> To: 
> Message-ID:
>   <
> befd613bd39142499989f836556ddc8301272...@ace.accellab.lan>
> Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> Hi Curt,
> I agree with your pathologist. The section that you use as a negative
> control (without primary) in an IHC run should ideally be tissue that is
> a
> known positive, and of the same nature as the test sample. Therefore the
> best sample is often a section of your positive control tissue.
> The purpose of this negative control is to make sure that any positive
> staining observed in the test sample is not due to a spurious
> cross-reaction, unrelated to the primary. I don't think the issue per se
> is
> that you are using tissue from the same patient; rather, it is that you
> are
> using a sample for which the staining characteristics are not known. For
> instance, if are using a lymph node section as a negative, for a stain
> that
> targets an epithelial marker (eg Her2) in the test breast sample, then
> your
> negative tissu

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Liz Chlipala
Amos

Isotype negative controls are based upon protein concentration not
dilution.  They must be the same protein concentration of the primary
antibody at the dilution you are using.  Using the same dilution will
not work unless both stock solutions (primary antibody and isotype
control) are at the same protein concentration which is rarely the case.

Liz 

Elizabeth A. Chlipala, BS, HTL(ASCP)QIHC
Manager
Premier Laboratory, LLC
PO Box 18592
Boulder, Colorado 80308
office (303) 682-3949 
fax (303) 682-9060
www.premierlab.com
 
 
Ship to Address:
1567 Skyway Drive, Unit E
Longmont, Colorado 80504

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Amos
Brooks
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 2:16 PM
To: jm.lapoi...@accellab.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Hi,
 This is simply a question of definitions. They are actually both
right.
If you have the patient tissue as a negative control you are not using
the
primary antibody on it but are replacing it (ideally) with an Ig with
the
same isotype AND dilution (universal negative is stupid). So if your
primary
is an IgG1 from a mouse and you use it at 1:100, your negative control
would
be a non-immune mouse serum IgG1 diluted to 1:100. Running this on
unrelated
material will not show you anything in this case. what it will show you
is
that the detection system you are using is specific to the antibody you
put
on the tissue and not to A) something else in the tissue or B) something
on
the Ig that is not the epitope itself.
 Although, If you run the same primary antibody on tissue that you
expect will not react with the primary antibody, this would prove that
the
antibody reaction is specific to the antigenin question. This does raise
the
question of what to do about ubiquitous antigens (like ubiquitin) that
are
actually everywhere. Every cell has a cell cycle so they will all at one
point or another show proliferation or degeneration for example. Does
this
mean you don't run a negative control? No you need to look at it in the
perspective of expected results.
 There are various ways of using negative (and positive) controls.
It
would actually be cost prohibitive to run ALL the possible positive and
negative controls for every test that we as histologists do. We need to
discuss with our pathologists what they want to have done to give them
the
confidence in our testing to support their diagnosis. But remember that
just
because another lab and another pathologist does it differently doesn't
mean
it is wrong. It's just different.

Happy Friday Folks,
Amos


Message: 5
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 13:25:49 -0400
From: "Jean-Martin Lapointe" 
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
To: 
Message-ID:
   <
befd613bd39142499989f836556ddc8301272...@ace.accellab.lan>
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="iso-8859-1"

Hi Curt,
I agree with your pathologist. The section that you use as a negative
control (without primary) in an IHC run should ideally be tissue that is
a
known positive, and of the same nature as the test sample. Therefore the
best sample is often a section of your positive control tissue.
The purpose of this negative control is to make sure that any positive
staining observed in the test sample is not due to a spurious
cross-reaction, unrelated to the primary. I don't think the issue per se
is
that you are using tissue from the same patient; rather, it is that you
are
using a sample for which the staining characteristics are not known. For
instance, if are using a lymph node section as a negative, for a stain
that
targets an epithelial marker (eg Her2) in the test breast sample, then
your
negative tissue is not appropriate, because since lymph node contains no
epithelial tissue, it will not stain no matter what. Therefore if your
test
sample shows a positive reaction in the epithelial tissue, but for some
reason that reaction is a spurious false-positive, then the lymph node
negative will not reveal that.
I realize that this is all very theoretical and hypothetical, but I
understand the pathologist wanting to be confident in the knowledge that
all
potential technical issues are eliminated before making his diagnosis.

Jean-Martin
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[Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Amos Brooks
Hi,
 This is simply a question of definitions. They are actually both right.
If you have the patient tissue as a negative control you are not using the
primary antibody on it but are replacing it (ideally) with an Ig with the
same isotype AND dilution (universal negative is stupid). So if your primary
is an IgG1 from a mouse and you use it at 1:100, your negative control would
be a non-immune mouse serum IgG1 diluted to 1:100. Running this on unrelated
material will not show you anything in this case. what it will show you is
that the detection system you are using is specific to the antibody you put
on the tissue and not to A) something else in the tissue or B) something on
the Ig that is not the epitope itself.
 Although, If you run the same primary antibody on tissue that you
expect will not react with the primary antibody, this would prove that the
antibody reaction is specific to the antigenin question. This does raise the
question of what to do about ubiquitous antigens (like ubiquitin) that are
actually everywhere. Every cell has a cell cycle so they will all at one
point or another show proliferation or degeneration for example. Does this
mean you don't run a negative control? No you need to look at it in the
perspective of expected results.
 There are various ways of using negative (and positive) controls. It
would actually be cost prohibitive to run ALL the possible positive and
negative controls for every test that we as histologists do. We need to
discuss with our pathologists what they want to have done to give them the
confidence in our testing to support their diagnosis. But remember that just
because another lab and another pathologist does it differently doesn't mean
it is wrong. It's just different.

Happy Friday Folks,
Amos


Message: 5
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 13:25:49 -0400
From: "Jean-Martin Lapointe" 
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
To: 
Message-ID:
   <
befd613bd39142499989f836556ddc8301272...@ace.accellab.lan>
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="iso-8859-1"

Hi Curt,
I agree with your pathologist. The section that you use as a negative
control (without primary) in an IHC run should ideally be tissue that is a
known positive, and of the same nature as the test sample. Therefore the
best sample is often a section of your positive control tissue.
The purpose of this negative control is to make sure that any positive
staining observed in the test sample is not due to a spurious
cross-reaction, unrelated to the primary. I don't think the issue per se is
that you are using tissue from the same patient; rather, it is that you are
using a sample for which the staining characteristics are not known. For
instance, if are using a lymph node section as a negative, for a stain that
targets an epithelial marker (eg Her2) in the test breast sample, then your
negative tissue is not appropriate, because since lymph node contains no
epithelial tissue, it will not stain no matter what. Therefore if your test
sample shows a positive reaction in the epithelial tissue, but for some
reason that reaction is a spurious false-positive, then the lymph node
negative will not reveal that.
I realize that this is all very theoretical and hypothetical, but I
understand the pathologist wanting to be confident in the knowledge that all
potential technical issues are eliminated before making his diagnosis.

Jean-Martin
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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Curt Tague
"If an inspector saw that,  you would be on immediate suspension."

 

This was the last statement from the original post, I chose not to include
it initially but it's just too juicy to keep from everyone else. Having
forwarded several of the responses I think he has come to understand that
it's not necessarily a requirement that will have us on immediate suspension
but rather a preference that, being a private lab, I will gladly provide to
keep the business.

 

Thanks again everyone and have a good weekend.

 

Curt 

 

 

From: Jay Lundgren [mailto:jaylundg...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 11:57 AM
To: Curt Tague
Cc: Ingles Claire; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

 

Curt,

 

 Thank you.  I'm here all week, try the veal.

 

  Sincerely,

 

   Jay A. Lundgren, M.S., HTL (ASCP)




























 

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Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Jay Lundgren
Curt,

 Thank you.  I'm here all week, try the veal.

  Sincerely,

   Jay A. Lundgren, M.S., HTL (ASCP)
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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Curt Tague
All very insightful input. I took the liberty of forwarding some of the
comments to the client, I think I errantly sent some of the critical
comments about him too. I'll probably hear about it later, the best was the
clown residency, I was in tears laughing. i'll let you all know what he says
about CAPs protocol, don't exactly know how he can argue against that.

Thanks all,
Curt 

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Ingles
Claire 
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 6:30 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

 
And the block in question has already been proven positive using THAT
procedure and antibody during validation.
Claire



From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu on behalf of Thomas Jasper
Sent: Thu 5/19/2011 2:39 PM
To: pete.peder...@healthonecares.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question



Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody. 
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary?

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



_

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Ingles Claire
 
And the block in question has already been proven positive using THAT procedure 
and antibody during validation.
Claire



From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu on behalf of Thomas Jasper
Sent: Thu 5/19/2011 2:39 PM
To: pete.peder...@healthonecares.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question



Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody. 
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary?

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Dawson, Glen
Tj,

Amen brother!

GD

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Thomas Jasper
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 2:39 PM
To: pete.peder...@healthonecares.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody.
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary?

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-20 Thread Dawson, Glen
Pete,

OK, time for an example:

A pathologist orders 4 IHC's on a block.

I run 5 slides total:  4 IHC slides with a section of patient tissue and a 
known positive.  1 slide with patient tissue only for the negative control.

The one negative control is put through the retrieval/protocol that is most 
likely to cause nonspecific staining.  I don't run the known positive control 
tissue used on the 4 actual IHC slides as negative controls.

Perhaps I didn't point out that my original post was addressing the negative 
control?  I'm a bit surprised by the confusion.

As for the question of "how I know the staining seen in a positive control is 
truly positive?":  All known positive controls are tested previously so I know 
that they work for the antibody that I'm using them for and I would assume the 
pathologist uses morphology and localization of staining to determine that the 
positive control is working.  That's what I do.

I've gone through 7 CAP inspections utilizing the practices above with no 
problems thus far.  Perhaps you could enlighten me on IHC requirements that I 
haven't come across.

Glen D.



-Original Message-
From: pete.peder...@healthonecares.com [mailto:pete.peder...@healthonecares.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 2:31 PM
To: Dawson, Glen; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not 
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative control 
correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards the use of a 
positive control? How can you guarantee the positive control tissue was treated 
the same as the positive stained patient tissue? According to your logic it 
cannot. Therefore, without the use of a negative control how can you say the 
staining seen in the positive control is truly positive and not artifact? Best 
practice says use positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please 
enlighten me if you know anything to the contrary?

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson, Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to the 
patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from the 
patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the same as the 
patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that could 
cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is not 
even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that the 
patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the window.  
This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Tony Henwood
"either would fulfill the purpose of detecting non-specific positive staining" 
- NO

Not in the patients sample unless it is included (which for diagnostic uses is 
the most important).

Regards 
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA) 
Laboratory Manager & Senior Scientist 
Tel: 612 9845 3306 
Fax: 612 9845 3318 
the children's hospital at westmead
Cnr Hawkesbury Road and Hainsworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA 


-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Jean-Martin 
Lapointe
Sent: Friday, 20 May 2011 7:50 AM
To: Angela Bitting; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I can certainly agree with that. Whether it’s the patient’s sample or the known 
positive control that are stained without primary, either would fulfill the 
purpose of detecting non-specific positive staining. 

Jean-Martin

 

 

From: Angela Bitting [mailto:akbitt...@geisinger.edu] 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 4:50 PM
To: Jean-Martin Lapointe; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

 

I agree with the majority. A  patient slide stained without primary antibody, 
and a patient section with primary antibody and  a known positive control 
tissue, on the same slide when possible, is sufficient. I do agree, however, 
that the use of a negative tissue control is important in your initial antibody 
optimization and validation.

 

Angela Bitting, HT(ASCP), QIHC
Technical Specialist, Histology
Geisinger Medical Center 
100 N Academy Ave. MC 23-00
Danville, PA 17822
phone  570-214-9634
fax  570-271-5916 

 

email. Thank you.


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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Tony Henwood
It still comes down to why test the positive control for false positive 
reactions after it has already been determined that they are not present.

But what you say about positive controls matching patient's tissue with regards 
to pre-fixing, fixing and processing is correct but in the real world we cannot 
guarantee that this would happen. We can only work on averages and hope that 
conditions are as similar as possible.

In a perfect world we would not need negative, nor dare I say positive, 
controls.

Regards 
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA) 
Laboratory Manager & Senior Scientist 
Tel: 612 9845 3306 
Fax: 612 9845 3318 
the children's hospital at westmead
Cnr Hawkesbury Road and Hainsworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA 


-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Friday, 20 May 2011 5:31 AM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not 
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative control 
correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards the use of a 
positive control? How can you guarantee the positive control tissue was treated 
the same as the positive stained patient tissue? According to your logic it 
cannot. Therefore, without the use of a negative control how can you say the 
staining seen in the positive control is truly positive and not artifact? Best 
practice says use positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please 
enlighten me if you know anything to the contrary? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson, Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to the 
patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from the 
patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the same as the 
patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that could 
cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is not 
even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that the 
patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the window.  
This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive with 
the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had no 
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation dictating 
what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we get one slide of 
patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive control on 
the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was just the 
patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used for the 
positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a negative 
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative control 
without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct that 
immediately."





Curt



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[Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Shea's
Curt is right, according to CAP ...

ANP.22570 QC - Antibodies Phase II

Appropriate negative controls are used.

NOTE: Negative controls must assess the presence of nonspecific staining in 
patient tissue as well

as the specificity of each antibody. Results of controls must be documented, 
either in internal

laboratory records, or in the patient report. A statement in the report such 
as, "All controls show

appropriate reactivity" is sufficient.

A negative reagent control is used to assess nonspecific or aberrant staining 
in patient tissue related

to the antigen retrieval conditions and/or detection system used. A separate 
section of patient tissue

is processed using the same reagent and epitope retrieval protocol as the 
patient test slide, except

that the primary antibody is omitted, and replaced by any one of the following:

? An unrelated antibody of the same isotype as the primary antibody (for 
monoclonal

primary antibodies)

? An unrelated antibody from the same animal species as the primary antibody 
(for

polyclonal primary antibodies)

? The negative control reagent included in the staining kit

? The diluent/buffer solution in which the primary antibody is diluted

In general, a separate negative reagent control should be run for each block of 
patient tissue being

immunostained; however, for cases in which there is simultaneous staining of 
multiple blocks from

the same specimen with the same antibody (e.g. cytokeratin staining of multiple 
axillary sentinel

lymph nodes), performing a single negative control on one of the blocks may be 
sufficient provided

that all such blocks are fixed and processed identically. This exception does 
not apply to stains on

different types of tissues or those using different antigen retrieval protocols 
or antibody detection

systems. The laboratory director must determine which cases will have only one 
negative reagent

control, and this must be specified in the department's procedure manual.

The negative reagent control would ideally control for each reagent protocol 
and antibody retrieval

condition; however, large antibody panels often employ multiple antigen 
retrieval procedures. In

such cases, a reasonable minimum control would be to perform the negative 
reagent control using

the most aggressive retrieval procedure in the particular antibody panel. 
Aggressiveness of antigen

retrieval (in decreasing order) is as follows: pressure cooker; enzyme 
digestion, boiling; microwave;

steamer; water bath. High pH retrieval should be considered more aggressive 
than comparable

retrieval in citrate buffer at pH 6.0.

It is also important to assess the specificity of each antibody by a negative 
tissue control, which

must show no staining of tissues known to lack the antigen.The negative tissue 
control is processed

using the same fixation, epitope retrieval and immunostaining protocols as the 
patient tissue.

Unexpected positive staining of such tissues indicates that the test has lost 
specificity, perhaps

because of improper antibody concentration or excessive antigen retrieval. 
Intrinsic properties of

the test tissue may also be the cause of "non-specific" staining. For example, 
tissues with high

endogenous biotin activity such as liver or renal tubules may simulate positive 
staining when using

a detection method based on biotin labeling.

A negative tissue control must be processed for each antibody in a given run. 
Any of the following

can serve as a negative tissue control:

1. Multitissue blocks.These can provide simultaneous positive and negative 
tissue controls,

and are considered "best practice" (see below).

2. The positive control slide or patient test slides, if these slides contain 
tissue elements

that should not react with the antibody.

3. A separate negative tissue control slide.

The type of negative tissue control used (i.e. separate sections, internal 
controls or multitissue

blocks) should be specified in the laboratory manual (refer to ANP.22250).

Multitissue blocks may be considered best practice and can have a major role in 
maintaining quality.

When used as a combined positive and negative tissue control as mentioned 
above, they can serve

as a permanent record documenting the sensitivity and specificity of every 
stain, particularly when

mounted on the same slide as the patient tissue. When the components are chosen 
appropriately,

multitissue blocks may be used for many different primary antibodies, 
decreasing the number of

different control blocks needed by the laboratory. Multitissue blocks are also 
ideal for determining

optimal titers of primary antibodies since they allow simultaneous evaluation 
of many different pieces

of tissue. Finally, they are a useful and efficient means to screen new 
antibodies for sensitivity and

specificity or new lots of antibody for consistency, which should be done 
before putting any antibody

into diagnostic use.

Evidence of Compliance:

? Written pro

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Thomas Jasper
Pete,

Can't argue with that.  I think for the sake of expediency most clinical
services run a "known" positive and a patient slide for negative.  In
the case of H. Pylori, for instance, we may cut a box of control slides
and it's possible to go through the area where the organisms were.  This
also happens with controls that demonstrate positivity by other means
epithelium, tumor, etc.  We may have to re-run tests in these
situations. I believe we are similar to many clinical labs in our
reliance on known positives.
tj

-Original Message-
From: pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
[mailto:pete.peder...@healthonecares.com] 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 2:54 PM
To: Thomas Jasper; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Thomas,

Agreed, however, how can you say with certainty that the control is
still good, or the antibody is still performing optimally?
Hypothetically speaking, if you had a known positive control and ran it
like a patient specimen (positive and negative) and had staining in the
negatively stained control that you had been only running as a
positively stained control prior, how would you proceed? What good is a
positive control without if it is not treated identically as patient
tissue. If you had none specific staining in a patient negative but is
was also there in your known positive control which you stained
negatively as well, then you could mark up to nonspecific staining to
reagent or IHC user error. If the negatively stained positive control
stains truly negative and the patient negative has nonspecific staining
then you would know patient tissue is compromised or has been mistreated
somewhere along the way because your positively stained and negatively
stained positive controls demonstrate the staining was done correctly,
correct? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: Thomas Jasper [mailto:tjas...@copc.net] 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 1:39 PM
To: Pedersen Pete; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody.  
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Pete.Pedersen
Thomas,

Agreed, however, how can you say with certainty that the control is still good, 
or the antibody is still performing optimally? Hypothetically speaking, if you 
had a known positive control and ran it like a patient specimen (positive and 
negative) and had staining in the negatively stained control that you had been 
only running as a positively stained control prior, how would you proceed? What 
good is a positive control without if it is not treated identically as patient 
tissue. If you had none specific staining in a patient negative but is was also 
there in your known positive control which you stained negatively as well, then 
you could mark up to nonspecific staining to reagent or IHC user error. If the 
negatively stained positive control stains truly negative and the patient 
negative has nonspecific staining then you would know patient tissue is 
compromised or has been mistreated somewhere along the way because your 
positively stained and negatively stained positive controls demonstrate the 
staining was done correctly, correct? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: Thomas Jasper [mailto:tjas...@copc.net] 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 1:39 PM
To: Pedersen Pete; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody.  
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive c

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Jean-Martin Lapointe
I can certainly agree with that. Whether it’s the patient’s sample or the known 
positive control that are stained without primary, either would fulfill the 
purpose of detecting non-specific positive staining. 

Jean-Martin

 

 

From: Angela Bitting [mailto:akbitt...@geisinger.edu] 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 4:50 PM
To: Jean-Martin Lapointe; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

 

I agree with the majority. A  patient slide stained without primary antibody, 
and a patient section with primary antibody and  a known positive control 
tissue, on the same slide when possible, is sufficient. I do agree, however, 
that the use of a negative tissue control is important in your initial antibody 
optimization and validation.

 

Angela Bitting, HT(ASCP), QIHC
Technical Specialist, Histology
Geisinger Medical Center 
100 N Academy Ave. MC 23-00
Danville, PA 17822
phone  570-214-9634
fax  570-271-5916 

 

email. Thank you.

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[Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Jean-Martin Lapointe
I think that this is indeed what is happening here, that there is confusion 
between a negative control stain (positive tissue, stained without the primary 
ab) and a negative control tissue (tissue known to not express the marker, 
stained normally).

I had assumed we were talking about the former, because this is what the 
pathologist cited by Curt wrote in his email. While a known negative control 
tissue is useful in an IHC run, I am somewhat alarmed to gather from the 
responses sent that a section without primary is NOT being included in standard 
IHC runs at your respective labs. To me, this is an absolute necessity in order 
to properly evaluate IHC results. But that might be because I work in research 
rather than in a clinical setting, where i'm assuming that priorities are 
different.
Also, I do not agree with Glen's post, for the reasons outlined by Pete. 

Jean-Martin


--

Message: 11
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 13:37:38 -0500
From: "Sebree Linda A" 
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
To: "Dawson, Glen" ,

Message-ID:


Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="us-ascii"

I basically agree with you Glen.  I think some people are mixing up
Negative Reagent Controls (substituting negative serum, Ab diluent, etc.
for antibody) and Negative Tissue Controls (substituting a tissue known
to be negative for the antibody being run).  It CAN be confusing. 


Linda A. Sebree
University of Wisconsin Hospital & Clinics
IHC/ISH Laboratory
DB1-223 VAH
600 Highland Ave.
Madison, WI 53792
(608)265-6596


-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 1:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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--

Message: 12
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 14:53:57 -0400
From: Mary Helie 
Subject: [Histonet] neg control
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Message-ID: <4dd56745.3030...@yale.edu>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

What??? News to me as well.



--

Message: 13
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 14:01:45 -0500
From: 
Subject: [Histonet] Slides for 

RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Thomas Jasper
Pete,

When you run a positive control.  The tissue is already a known positive
(or it should be) for whichever antibody you are running regardless of
prior handling.  It would be impossible for this not to be so.  However,
with a negative, the concern is seeing how the patient tissue turns out
when subjected to all the same conditions, minus the antibody.  
tj

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
pete.peder...@healthonecares.com
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:31 PM
To: gdaw...@dynacaremilwaukee.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative
control correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards
the use of a positive control? How can you guarantee the positive
control tissue was treated the same as the positive stained patient
tissue? According to your logic it cannot. Therefore, without the use of
a negative control how can you say the staining seen in the positive
control is truly positive and not artifact? Best practice says use
positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please enlighten me if
you know anything to the contrary? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Pete.Pedersen
Glen,

If I am to understand you correctly you are saying control tissue is not 
treated the same as patient tissue, therefore is useless as a negative control 
correct? Then inversely doesn't that mean the same thing towards the use of a 
positive control? How can you guarantee the positive control tissue was treated 
the same as the positive stained patient tissue? According to your logic it 
cannot. Therefore, without the use of a negative control how can you say the 
staining seen in the positive control is truly positive and not artifact? Best 
practice says use positive and negative patient and control tissue. Please 
enlighten me if you know anything to the contrary? 

Pete Pedersen   B.S. HTL (ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor

-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson, Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to the 
patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from the 
patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the same as the 
patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that could 
cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is not 
even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that the 
patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the window.  
This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Jan Shivers

I agree 100% with Glen.

Jan Shivers
UMN VDL

- Original Message - 
From: "Dawson, Glen" 

To: 
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 1:32 PM
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question


IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to the 
patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from the 
patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the same as 
the patient tissue?  For example:


1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that could 
cause non-specific staining.

5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is not 
even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that the 
patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the window. 
This makes NO sense.


Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Sebree Linda A
I basically agree with you Glen.  I think some people are mixing up
Negative Reagent Controls (substituting negative serum, Ab diluent, etc.
for antibody) and Negative Tissue Controls (substituting a tissue known
to be negative for the antibody being run).  It CAN be confusing. 


Linda A. Sebree
University of Wisconsin Hospital & Clinics
IHC/ISH Laboratory
DB1-223 VAH
600 Highland Ave.
Madison, WI 53792
(608)265-6596


-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Dawson,
Glen
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 1:32 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to
the patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from
the patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the
same as the patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that
could cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is
not even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that
the patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the
window.  This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Dawson, Glen
IMHO: Running any piece of tissue as a control that does not belong to the 
patient being tested makes zero sense.  Because it would not be from the 
patient tissue being tested, how do you know if it was handled the same as the 
patient tissue?  For example:

1) Were they processed the same way?
2) Did the patient tissue dry out in the OR before it was delievered?
3) Was the patient tissue ever irradiated?
4) Does the patient tissue contain any of a number of substances that could 
cause non-specific staining.
5) Was the patient abducted by aliens?

My point is that running a piece of tissue as a negative control that is not 
even from the patient being tested throws all of the conditions that the 
patient tissue was exposed to prior to and during processing out the window.  
This makes NO sense.

Glen Dawson  BS, HT(ASCP) & QIHC
IHC Manager
Milwaukee, WI



-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."





Curt



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Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Rene J Buesa
The ideal situation is as follows: a known (+) control with the patient's 
tissue to make sure that the reaction worked, and a (-) using a section from 
the patient's tissue to rule out any false (+).
René J.

From: Curt Tague 
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 12:04 PM
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont. from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance. 



Email: 

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct that
immediately."





Curt 



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AW: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Gudrun Lang
I think this approach mixes up antibody-validation and analysis.
The pathologist should be confident, that the used antibody is validated
with several types of tissue and that the special antibody stains positive
epitopes positive and negative epitopes negative.

But the point is, that the patient tissue is unknown and shows perhaps
characteristics, that lead to unspecific staining. And this has to be
compared to the specific staining in the sample.

Gudrun Lang

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] Im Auftrag von
Jean-Martin Lapointe
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 19. Mai 2011 19:26
An: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Betreff: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

Hi Curt,
I agree with your pathologist. The section that you use as a negative
control (without primary) in an IHC run should ideally be tissue that is a
known positive, and of the same nature as the test sample. Therefore the
best sample is often a section of your positive control tissue.
The purpose of this negative control is to make sure that any positive
staining observed in the test sample is not due to a spurious
cross-reaction, unrelated to the primary. I don't think the issue per se is
that you are using tissue from the same patient; rather, it is that you are
using a sample for which the staining characteristics are not known. For
instance, if are using a lymph node section as a negative, for a stain that
targets an epithelial marker (eg Her2) in the test breast sample, then your
negative tissue is not appropriate, because since lymph node contains no
epithelial tissue, it will not stain no matter what. Therefore if your test
sample shows a positive reaction in the epithelial tissue, but for some
reason that reaction is a spurious false-positive, then the lymph node
negative will not reveal that.
I realize that this is all very theoretical and hypothetical, but I
understand the pathologist wanting to be confident in the knowledge that all
potential technical issues are eliminated before making his diagnosis.

Jean-Martin

__
Jean-Martin Lapointe, DMV, MS, dACVP
Vice-President, Pathologie
AccelLAB Inc
1635 Lionel-Bertrand, Boisbriand
Québec, Canada  J7H 1N8
tel:  450-435-9482 ext.247
fax: 450-435-4795
jm.lapoi...@accellab.com
 
 



--

Message: 24
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 09:04:24 -0700
From: "Curt Tague" 
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
To: 
Message-ID: <019801cc163e$6c1487d0$443d9770$@ta...@pathologyarts.com>
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="us-ascii"

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont. from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance.



Email:

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct that
immediately."





Curt







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[Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Jean-Martin Lapointe
Hi Curt,
I agree with your pathologist. The section that you use as a negative control 
(without primary) in an IHC run should ideally be tissue that is a known 
positive, and of the same nature as the test sample. Therefore the best sample 
is often a section of your positive control tissue. 
The purpose of this negative control is to make sure that any positive staining 
observed in the test sample is not due to a spurious cross-reaction, unrelated 
to the primary. I don't think the issue per se is that you are using tissue 
from the same patient; rather, it is that you are using a sample for which the 
staining characteristics are not known. For instance, if are using a lymph node 
section as a negative, for a stain that targets an epithelial marker (eg Her2) 
in the test breast sample, then your negative tissue is not appropriate, 
because since lymph node contains no epithelial tissue, it will not stain no 
matter what. Therefore if your test sample shows a positive reaction in the 
epithelial tissue, but for some reason that reaction is a spurious 
false-positive, then the lymph node negative will not reveal that. 
I realize that this is all very theoretical and hypothetical, but I understand 
the pathologist wanting to be confident in the knowledge that all potential 
technical issues are eliminated before making his diagnosis.

Jean-Martin

__
Jean-Martin Lapointe, DMV, MS, dACVP
Vice-President, Pathologie
AccelLAB Inc
1635 Lionel-Bertrand, Boisbriand
Québec, Canada  J7H 1N8
tel:  450-435-9482 ext.247
fax: 450-435-4795
jm.lapoi...@accellab.com
 
 



--

Message: 24
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 09:04:24 -0700
From: "Curt Tague" 
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question
To: 
Message-ID: <019801cc163e$6c1487d0$443d9770$@ta...@pathologyarts.com>
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset="us-ascii"

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont. from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance. 

 

Email: 

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct that
immediately."

 

 

Curt 

 





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Re: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Jay Lundgren
Curt,

 Nonsense.  The negative control is used to evaluate endogenous staining
in the *patient* tissue.  Your Pathologist needs to do another residency at
clown college.

   Sincerely,

Jay A. Lundgren, M.S., HTL (ASCP)
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RE: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Sebree Linda A
That's a new one on me!   


Linda A. Sebree
University of Wisconsin Hospital & Clinics
IHC/ISH Laboratory
DB1-223 VAH
600 Highland Ave.
Madison, WI 53792
(608)265-6596


-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Curt
Tague
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had
no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we
get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont.
from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the
neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance. 

 

Email: 

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive
control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was
just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used
for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a
negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct
that
immediately."

 

 

Curt 

 

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[Histonet] IHC pos. & neg. control question

2011-05-19 Thread Curt Tague
I got this email from a pathologist today. we have always run a positive
with the patient tissue and a negative, the same patient tissue, and had no
problems. Am I missing something. Is there any documented regulation
dictating what needs to be used for the controls. In some cases if we get
one slide of patient tissue, then we will use the pos. and neg. cont. from
the same block but typically it's the pt. tissue that is used for the neg.
control. Thanks for your guidance. 

 

Email: 

"I received slides on sentinel lymph node biopsies with a positive control
on the same slide as the breast tissue, but the negative control was just
the patient's lymph node and did not have the corresponding section used for
the positive control.  The patient's own tissue cannot be used as a negative
control.  The tissue that stained positively must serve as the negative
control without the antibody.  This is critical and you need to correct that
immediately."

 

 

Curt 

 

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