Centrifugal separation of carcinoma or atypical cells in voided urine |
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Authors: | Craig D. Albright John K. Frost |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. |
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Abstract: | A simple density gradient method was used to separate atypical and cancer cells from non-cancer cells in voided urine from patients with transitional cell atypia (moderate and grave atypia) and bladder cancer (squamous cell carcinoma and transitional cell carcinoma). Prior to cell separation, the Saccomanno preserved cells were dispersed by homogenization. After cell separation (5 min x 1400 rpm), atypical and cancer cells were enriched up to 20-fold. Also, most of the leucocytes (68-98%) and squamous cells (47-82%) were absent from density gradient specimen fractions containing the largest percentages of atypical and cancer cells. Peak purity ranges of atypical or cancer cells from different sample classes showed a large degree of overlap. This permitted the pooling of density gradient fractions enriched for atypical or cancer cells, thus increasing the efficiency of the method. Also, following centrifugation, the Papanicolaou-stained specimen fractions showed less background staining than the unprocessed controls, and the cells retained diagnostic morphologic features. We infer that this method may be a useful, low-cost approach for the morphologic study of developing cancers, not only from the urinary bladder, but also from the respiratory tract. |
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