An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.

Mice are used for modelling the biology of many human diseases, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Mouse models recapitulate many aspects of human disease and are invaluable tools for studying the biology, treatment and prevention of CRC. Unlike humans, many mouse models develop lesions primarily in...

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Main Authors: Jennifer S Davis, Vineet Gupta, Mihai Gagea, Xiangwei Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4790911?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-84831d12192d4affafa3e2bc3c3695a02020-11-25T01:47:11ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01113e015146310.1371/journal.pone.0151463An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.Jennifer S DavisVineet GuptaMihai GageaXiangwei WuMice are used for modelling the biology of many human diseases, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Mouse models recapitulate many aspects of human disease and are invaluable tools for studying the biology, treatment and prevention of CRC. Unlike humans, many mouse models develop lesions primarily in the small intestine, which necessitates removal and examination of this organ in order to evaluate treatment efficacy. Commonly, the small intestine is visually examined for gross lesions and then selectively embedded in paraffin blocks for further microscopic analysis. Unfortunately, this method suffers from inherent bias toward counting large lesions and simultaneously missing smaller lesions. Even more, this method leaves no permanent record of diagnosed and measured lesions. We evaluated inter-observer variability in a mouse model of CRC using visual examination, and directly compared the visual, gross examination with a histologic analytic method using digital slides of hematoxylin and eosin stained tissue sections.Using visual examination, there was a high degree of inter-observer variability. As this method does not provide a permanent record of measurements, there is no capability to arbitrate between differing observations. In contrast, histologic analysis allowed for the creation of a permanent record of lesion measurements taken. When compared directly, histologic analysis of annotated digital images has significantly improved accuracy. Using this method we were able to distinguish mutant mice from wild type littermates even at a very young age. With gross visual examination, this distinction was not possible.Histologic analysis of digital images of murine intestinal tissue provides a vital improvement over the commonly used visual, gross examination method. Unlike visual gross examination, histologic analysis is not biased by the size of intestinal adenoma, misdiagnosis of another lesion type, or presence of a Peyer's patch. It also provides accountability in the form of a permanent record of lesions counted. Histologic analysis using digital slides represents a critical improvement over the current, widely used method of visual gross examination and should be considered for future studies using mouse models of CRC.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4790911?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer S Davis
Vineet Gupta
Mihai Gagea
Xiangwei Wu
spellingShingle Jennifer S Davis
Vineet Gupta
Mihai Gagea
Xiangwei Wu
An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jennifer S Davis
Vineet Gupta
Mihai Gagea
Xiangwei Wu
author_sort Jennifer S Davis
title An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
title_short An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
title_full An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
title_fullStr An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
title_full_unstemmed An Advanced Histologic Method for Evaluation of Intestinal Adenomas in Mice Using Digital Slides.
title_sort advanced histologic method for evaluation of intestinal adenomas in mice using digital slides.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Mice are used for modelling the biology of many human diseases, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Mouse models recapitulate many aspects of human disease and are invaluable tools for studying the biology, treatment and prevention of CRC. Unlike humans, many mouse models develop lesions primarily in the small intestine, which necessitates removal and examination of this organ in order to evaluate treatment efficacy. Commonly, the small intestine is visually examined for gross lesions and then selectively embedded in paraffin blocks for further microscopic analysis. Unfortunately, this method suffers from inherent bias toward counting large lesions and simultaneously missing smaller lesions. Even more, this method leaves no permanent record of diagnosed and measured lesions. We evaluated inter-observer variability in a mouse model of CRC using visual examination, and directly compared the visual, gross examination with a histologic analytic method using digital slides of hematoxylin and eosin stained tissue sections.Using visual examination, there was a high degree of inter-observer variability. As this method does not provide a permanent record of measurements, there is no capability to arbitrate between differing observations. In contrast, histologic analysis allowed for the creation of a permanent record of lesion measurements taken. When compared directly, histologic analysis of annotated digital images has significantly improved accuracy. Using this method we were able to distinguish mutant mice from wild type littermates even at a very young age. With gross visual examination, this distinction was not possible.Histologic analysis of digital images of murine intestinal tissue provides a vital improvement over the commonly used visual, gross examination method. Unlike visual gross examination, histologic analysis is not biased by the size of intestinal adenoma, misdiagnosis of another lesion type, or presence of a Peyer's patch. It also provides accountability in the form of a permanent record of lesions counted. Histologic analysis using digital slides represents a critical improvement over the current, widely used method of visual gross examination and should be considered for future studies using mouse models of CRC.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4790911?pdf=render
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