Background
Cryobiopsy is recently being promoted for biopsy of tumors in the lung periphery in precision medicine for lung cancer; the obtained tissue samples have been reported to be more useful compared to those obtained using forceps, because of the larger volume and higher quality. However, the influence of freezing and thawing of tissues when performing cryobiopsy on the
Conclusions
Freezing and thawing associated with cryobiopsy had virtually no effect on the results of IHC. We suggest that cryobiopsy specimens would therefore be ideal for precision medicine and translational research.
Methods
In this study, consecutive patients who underwent diagnostic bronchoscopy with cryobiopsy for peripheral pulmonary lesions (PPLs) at our institution between June 2017 and November 2021 were reviewed retrospectively. Specimens of diagnosed cases of unresectable or recurrent non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) were selected. We compared the
Results
Twenty-four of 40 patients were male (60%). The most frequent histologic type of cancer was adenocarcinoma (n=31, 77.5%), followed by NSCLC (n=4, 10%), squamous cell carcinoma (n=3, 7.5%), and others (n=2, 5%). The concordance rates of the tumor proportion scores (TPSs) for PD-L1, IHC score for HER2 and, IHC scores for HER3 were 85%, 72.5%, and 75%, respectively; the weighted kappa were 0.835, 0.637, and 0.697, respectively. Conclusions: Freezing and thawing associated with cryobiopsy had virtually no effect on the results of IHC. We suggest that cryobiopsy specimens would therefore be ideal for precision medicine and translational research.
