Cellular and Molecular Techniques






  • Chapter Contents



  • Liver biopsy 88




    • Evolving role 88



    • Different types 89



    • Limitations of and requirements for interpretation 91



    • New competitors and alternatives to liver biopsy 92




  • Routine handling, fixation and staining of liver specimens 95




    • Handling and fixation 95



    • Staining 95




  • Immunohistochemistry 97




    • Principles and main applications 97



    • Tissue microarray 98




  • Molecular techniques 99




    • In situ molecular techniques 99



    • Harvesting material for ex situ molecular analysis 100



    • Quantitative mRNA expression 102



    • Sequencing 102



    • Advances in molecular pathology of liver diseases 102




  • Other microscopic and optical techniques 104




    • Morphometry 104



    • Multiphoton fluorescent microscopy 104



Although the aetiology of most liver diseases can be identified by currently available biological tests, and although diagnosis of a liver mass can be approached by imaging techniques, histological evaluation continues to be integrated into management of most hepatic diseases. Light microscopic examination of a liver sample, usually after a biopsy procedure, provides details that cannot be obtained by other means. Therefore liver biopsy remains central to the evaluation of liver diseases. Not only are cases of undefined liver disease subjected to histological analysis, but more importantly, the effects on the liver of noxious agents, whether of viral, chemical, autoimmune or metabolic origin, require accurate histological evaluation relevant to the prognosis of the patient and to indications for cost-intensive and potentially side effect-prone therapies. Management of liver transplant patients necessitates regular histological evaluation for identification of possible complications and adequate treatment in this delicate setting. Liver biopsy may also provide important clues to the aetiology of unclear space-occupying lesions and suspected drug toxicity. Table 2.1 summarizes the most common reasons for practising liver biopsy.



Table 2.1

Main indications for liver biopsy








  • Abnormal liver blood tests



  • Evaluation of diagnosis, grade and stage of chronic liver disease



  • Evaluation of therapeutic efficacy in chronic liver disease



  • Unexplained cholestatic liver disease



  • Unexplained portal hypertension



  • Suspected drug injury



  • Fever of unknown origin, systemic disease



  • Suspected hepatic neoplasm and classification



  • Post-liver transplantation: evaluation of rejection, recurrence of initial disease, any other complications



The quality and quantity of information provided by a liver biopsy are highly dependent on sampling and tissue-processing techniques. In addition to the identification of pathological features that rely on pattern recognition after standard histological staining, liver biopsy can provide a great deal of additional information through recently implemented cellular and molecular techniques. This chapter reviews in detail both the routine and the advanced cellular and molecular techniques that can be undertaken.




Liver biopsy


Evolving role


Liver biopsy is a time-honoured procedure; its history spans more than a century, after Ehrlich first proposed a liver puncture for assessing glycogen content in the liver of a diabetic patient. The technique was used a few years later by Lucatello to drain a tropical abscess of the liver. At that time, liver tissue was mainly obtained for biochemical rather than morphological studies. Its first application for the diagnosis of cirrhotic liver disease in humans and rats was published in a series by Schüpfer in France in 1907, and its diagnostic potential was expanded by Bingel in Germany in 1923. In 1938 the Vim–Silverman needle was introduced, but it was the introduction of the Menghini needle that boosted the development of liver biopsy for use in clinical hepatology, both because it was safer and because it provided tissue of sufficient quality to support light microscopic and ancillary studies. Since that time, the method of sampling has been diversified to encompass not only different needle types for cutting and aspiration, but also different routes and combinations, through imaging modalities such as ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT) and laparoscopy ( Table 2.2 ).



Table 2.2

Types of liver biopsy with primary indications








  • Percutaneous biopsy: diffuse liver disease



  • Transvenous biopsy: diffuse chronic or acute liver disease with coagulation disorders



  • Wedge/laparoscopic biopsy: focal lesion, subcapsular



  • Ultrasound-guided biopsy: focal lesion



Expanded use of liver biopsy by hepatologists and gastroenterologists greatly increased our understanding of the physiopathology of liver diseases; indeed, liver biopsy itself has contributed to major landmarks in hepatology. The development of techniques in molecular pathology and the implementation of novel optical approaches have further increased the quantity (and quality) of information provided by liver biopsy. However, it remains an invasive procedure with possible adverse events and limitations. Although liver biopsy still belongs to the armamentarium of hepatologists, the development of noninvasive diagnostic procedures, such as novel blood tests and new imaging procedures, has recently fuelled discussions concerning the respective roles of liver biopsy and noninvasive alternatives.


Furthermore, the development of new antiviral drugs that may definitively eradicate chronic viral hepatitis (hepatitis C) or stop viral replication (hepatitis B), yet have few or no side effects, strongly reduces the need for liver biopsy to assess liver damage.


Different types


A liver sample can be obtained with a needle, either by cutting or aspiration. The needle can proceed percutaneously, via an intercostal or subcostal route of penetration, or by using a transvenous approach, usually via the jugular vein, and then anatomically proceeding toward the hepatic veins. In the case of a focal lesion, US or CT guidance as well as visual guidance during laparoscopy are additional options. Each of these methods has its advantages and disadvantages, providing samples of different shape and size ( Fig. 2.1 ). To avoid an unnecessary procedure, the goal of the biopsy should be determined before deciding on the method.




Figure 2.1


Different types of liver biopsy provide liver tissue of various sizes and shapes. Left to right, Wedge biopsy, percutaneous biopsy, transvenous liver biopsy.


Percutaneous liver biopsy


Percutaneous liver biopsy is performed with the patient in the supine position, the right hand behind the head. The extent of the liver is examined by percussion. It is customary to perform an abdominal US before percutaneous liver biopsy, which enables localization of the gallbladder and confirms the absence of dilated bile ducts, venous collaterals or anomalies in the chosen path of penetration. After local anaesthesia, a skin incision is made. Using an aspiration device (Menghini needle), steady suction is applied to the syringe connected to the needle, and the patient is asked to exhale fully. The needle is then advanced into the liver and rapidly withdrawn. Using a cutting needle (Tru-Cut biopsy), the tissue is obtained by cutting a specimen lodged in a niche in the obturator needle by a second cylindrical needle sliding over it. The needle is advanced into the liver, the sliding mechanism is triggered manually or automatically (‘biopsy gun’), and the needle is then withdrawn from the liver. The cutting needle remains in the liver longer, but it has been shown to produce superior tissue specimens. The biopsy can be repeated by several passages through the same incision if the biopsy fragment is considered too small, but increasing the number of passages is associated with an increased risk of complications if more than three passages are performed.


Percutaneous liver biopsy is an invasive procedure with a range of adverse events and limitations ( Table 2.3 ). Minor complications include transient and moderate pain, along with commonly reported anxiety and discomfort (5–20%), while vasovagal episodes are infrequent. Severe complications such as haemoperitoneum, biliary peritonitis and pneumothorax are rare (0.3–0.5%). The risk of haemorrhage in percutaneous liver biopsy depends on several factors, including age and the presence of malignant tumours. As with any invasive procedure, the risk of complications is influenced by the experience of the operator. In patients with coagulation disorders, an alternative procedure is recommended, and percutaneous liver biopsy coupled with embolization of the puncture canal (plugged biopsy) has been shown to be a safe procedure. Death after percutaneous biopsy is rare (between 0.1% and 0.01% according to the literature) but has been reported with biopsy in patients with advanced liver disease, haemorrhagic tumours and major comorbidities. The type of needle used is also a factor in reported complications, with a higher incidence of haemorrhage, pneumothorax, biliary leakage and peritonitis using cutting needles, and puncturing of other internal organs and sepsis using Menghini needles. Whether the diameter of the needle is a factor predisposing to haemorrhage is controversial. When deciding whether to use Menghini or cutting needles, the clinician should remember that smaller needles and smaller specimens may increase the number of passages or necessitate repuncture, with an increased risk of bleeding, to obtain representative tissue. For diffuse liver disease, a 16-gauge needle (internal diameter of cylinder, 1.2 mm) is typically preferred.



Table 2.3

Adverse events and limitations of percutaneous liver biopsy

















Adverse events
Minor events



  • Pain



  • Vasovagal episode

Major events



  • Haemoperitoneum



  • Liver haematoma



  • Biliary peritonitis



  • Pneumothorax



  • Death

Limitations



  • Sampling error



  • Observer variation



Transvenous liver biopsy


Percutaneous liver biopsy is contraindicated in patients with severe coagulation disorders caused by hepatic or other diseases, since haemorrhage is the most dangerous complication. Because these patients are nevertheless frequent candidates for histological assessment, another approach, transvenous liver biopsy, was developed. Liver biopsy by this method is usually obtained via the transjugular route. Technically, the internal jugular vein is cannulated and a sheath inserted according to the technique of Seldinger. A catheter is then guided through the right atrium into the inferior vena cava. After loading it with the transvenous biopsy needle, the catheter is advanced into one of the hepatic veins, which is visualized by injection of contrast medium. The needle is rapidly advanced 1–2 cm beyond the tip of the venous catheter, and suction is applied during liver passage. Liver tissue can subsequently be recovered from the needle. Transvenous liver biopsy is generally limited to patients with significant coagulation disorders, in whom liver histology is likely to alter therapeutic management.


The primary disadvantages of transvenous liver biopsy are the considerable materials and experience required, with a complex setup and heavy workload generating a significant cost. There is a theoretical risk of arrhythmia and of contrast material-related reactions, in addition to the use of x-rays, although it is generally considered to be a safe procedure. In addition, the liver sample is usually smaller than transcutaneous liver biopsy and is fragmented, although a recent study showed that this approach provides samples adequate for accurate histological interpretation ( Fig. 2.2 ). A major advantage is that the transjugular route allows simultaneous measurement of blood pressure and assessment of the hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) during the same procedure, which may be useful for predicting prognosis in cirrhosis, assessing the diagnosis of noncirrhotic portal hypertension and developing the management strategy.




Figure 2.2


Transvenous liver biopsy of cirrhotic patient. Although the biopsy sample is small and fragmented, the diagnosis of cirrhosis is obvious with annular fibrosis in a liver with steatosis. (Masson trichrome stain.)


Laparoscopic liver biopsy


Laparoscopic liver biopsy is an alternative route for obtaining a liver biopsy during visual assessment of the peritoneum and the abdominal organs. After a significant decline, laparoscopic liver biopsy has again attracted attention because of the development of minimally invasive minilaparoscopy. With this approach, visual inspection of the cranial and inferior liver surface is performed, and lesions of the left lobe, the dome of both lobes, the undersurface of the liver and the caudate and quadrate lobes can be biopsied by the aspiration or cutting technique. Several studies have suggested that laparoscopy is the gold standard for diagnosis of liver cirrhosis, since both the nodular pattern and the increased tissue hardness assessed by direct palpation lead to an increase in sensitivity. However, the sample size as well as frequent crush artefacts can make interpretation difficult.


Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration


US-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is extensively used to obtain histological and cytological information in focal hepatic lesions. It is a well-accepted, safe, easy and accurate diagnostic tool for the diagnosis of liver masses. Endoscopic US-guided FNA biopsies are also employed, particularly for lesions in the left lobe of the liver, with the needle easily traversing the stomach wall. For US-guided FNA, the hepatic lesion is visualized by real-time US and a path for needle aspiration plotted. A US probe with an integrated needle guidance slot is usually employed. A fine needle with a diameter of <1 mm is advanced into the lesion while patients hold their breath, suction is applied with a syringe connected to the needle, and after three to five passages within the mass, the needle is withdrawn from the liver.


The reliability and efficiency of FNA also depend on management of the specimen. The aspirated material is expelled with the help of a syringe filled with air into appropriately labelled glasses. The material is spread over several glass slides. Smears should be air-dried and fixed immediately in an alcohol solution so that staining can be performed for rapid cytological examination ( Fig. 2.3 ). The presence of a technologist or cytopathologist in the radiology/procedure room increases the overall accuracy of the procedure, enabling immediate verification of the adequacy of the material while final diagnosis is made after complete evaluation of smears, cell blocks and needle biopsy material.




Figure 2.3


Smear from an ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration spread on a glass slide and stained with Diff-Quik.


Small tissue fragments for cell blocks are best obtained by cytocentrifugation of the material obtained from an additional biopsy pass. This has been fully injected into a fixative (typically formalin) to provide adequate material to be handled as a routine microbiopsy sample using formalin fixation with paraffin embedding (FFPE) and sectioning. This material will enable evaluation of tissue architecture, special staining and use of additional techniques such as immunohistochemistry. US-guided biopsy can also be performed with larger needles, thereby obtaining a core specimen for standard histological evaluation.


Several studies have documented that the specificity of FNA cytology is excellent in the diagnosis of malignancy, with sensitivity as high as 93% and specificity approaching 100%. With respect to the biopsy approach, it was suggested that FNA and cutting-needle core biopsy each resulted in a diagnostic accuracy close to 80%, but when the two were combined, accuracy rose to 88%. Based on these studies, FNA cytology was shown to be a safe and sensitive diagnostic procedure for liver masses.


As with any other type of biopsy, FNA has limitations and pitfalls. Sampling errors can occur, most often from inexact needle localization, targeting of small nodules <1 cm or the presence of areas of necrosis or fibrosis within the lesion. However, even in lesions with fibrosis, FNA samples can be more cellular and prove to be more diagnostic than small FFPE cores. Haemorrhage with FNA using needles <1 mm in diameter is rare. The mortality rate has been estimated at between 0.006% and 0.1%.


The potential seeding of cancer cells following FNA of a malignancy is a controversial issue. Seeding rates of biopsies obtained from abdominal organs have been estimated at <0.01%. However, in a retrospective study of hepatocellular carcinomas, the rate was much higher, raising the question of the use of needle aspirations for this tumour. The use of a coaxial needle might significantly reduce the risk of seeding. Nevertheless, the issue of tumour cell seeding and its clinical relevance remains controversial and differs according to the lesion being biopsied.


Wedge liver biopsy


In an intraoperative setting, wedge biopsy is generally useful for a previously unknown focal lesion that is identified at, or immediately below, the capsule. Interpretation of a wedge biopsy may be difficult when too small a biopsy is obtained, especially if the liver is sampled tangentially to the capsule surface.


In the absence of a grossly recognizable lesion, biopsy obtained by the surgeon at the time of an operation is often disappointing; if a diffuse liver disease is suspected, needle biopsy rather than wedge biopsy should be performed to provide a more representative liver sample. Capsular and subcapsular fibrous tissue may be quite prominent in wedge biopsies of normal liver, and tissue coagulation artefacts can hamper biopsy interpretation. Clusters of acute inflammatory cells are often seen in the intraoperatively obtained liver biopsy as a nonspecific consequence of the surgical procedure itself—so-called surgical hepatitis ( Fig. 2.4 ).




Figure 2.4


Clumps of neutrophil leukocyte in liver biopsy obtained during surgery: ‘surgical hepatitis’ (H&E stain.)


Limitations of and requirements for interpretation


The main drawbacks of liver biopsy as a diagnostic procedure are related to sampling and observation errors. As liver biopsy involves only a tiny part of the whole organ, there is a risk that the sample obtained will not be suitable for evaluating a lesion which is heterogeneously distributed throughout the entire liver, as in liver fibrosis. Extensive reports have shown that, in the context of chronic liver diseases, increasing the size (length) of the biopsy can reduce the risk of sampling error. The length of the biopsy, rather than the number of portal tracts, appears to be a relevant criterion for assessing the adequacy of a liver biopsy, especially since counting portal tracts is difficult, if not impossible, in cases of chronic liver diseases with septal fibrosis or cirrhosis. Optimal dimensional (length and width) thresholds have been discussed by several authors and, except for cirrhosis—for which millimeter-sized fragments may be sufficient—a 25-mm biopsy is considered an optimal length for accurate evaluation, although 15 mm has also been considered sufficient in most studies. In addition, the diameter of the core is important, and it has been demonstrated that samples obtained by fine-needle biopsy (using 20–22-gauge needles) are unsuitable for accurate staging and grading of chronic liver disease. Indeed, a biopsy obtained with a 16–18-gauge needle has proved to be much more useful for this purpose. These thresholds have been set up mainly in the context of chronic hepatitis but might vary slightly in other diseases where lesions are much more systematized in the lobule, such as steatosis in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).


Observer variation is another potential limitation related to discordance between pathologists in biopsy interpretation. Training and specialization of pathologists is of major importance for reducing interobserver variations, and problems can be alleviated if individuals have had subspecialty experience in liver pathology for several years and practice in an academic context. Observer variation is also related to histopathological features. In the case of chronic hepatitis, studies have shown that fibrosis pattern is more reproducible than features related to necroinflammation. In terms of fibrosis scores, concordance between pathologists has been judged satisfactory whatever the system used. Thus although liver biopsy has its limitations, adequate precautions can reduce the flaws inherent in this method.


Of note, these semiquantitative scoring systems have been widely used for chronic liver diseases, including viral hepatitis, biliary diseases and NAFLD. The systems are useful in defining homogeneous groups of patients as an aid in clinical trials for assessing eligibility or drug efficacy, as well as in the follow-up when repeated biopsies are performed. Regardless of the disease, however, these scoring systems are not intended to replace the verbal description of the histological patterns and should be considered as only an aid for the clinician rather than a diagnostic procedure.


New competitors and alternatives to liver biopsy


Both the recent development of noninvasive markers and the major progress in imaging procedures have fuelled discussions as to the usefulness of liver biopsy, given the risks and limitations involved in this invasive procedure. Clearly, a logical and valid goal in hepatology would be to develop noninvasive tests for all liver disorders, which would preclude the need for liver biopsy in many cases and thereby reduce the (very low) incidence of complications. Although this goal may be reached in the near future for some pathologies such as cirrhosis or advanced fibrosis, particularly in hepatitis C, liver biopsy will continue to be an indispensable technique in the armamentarium of the hepatologist.


Liver blood tests and serum biomarkers


Because the liver has an exceptionally abundant blood supply, it is anticipated that blood component analysis should provide valuable insight into liver disease evaluation. With more than 10,000 different proteins, a wide variety of carbohydrates, lipid particles and pathogens, peripheral blood might be a major source of information for both diagnosis and prognosis, provided the appropriate component is scrutinized.


Liver function tests


Liver function tests (LFTs) have been routinely used for years as a first-line investigation to screen for liver diseases, but they can sometimes appear normal despite significant underlying liver disease. Furthermore, the relationship between severity of liver disease and changes in blood parameters is far from linear, with little predictive value or specificity. Commonly available tests include alanine transaminase (ALT) and aspartate transaminase (AST), alkaline liver phosphatase (ALP), γ-glutamyltransferase, serum bilirubin, prothrombin time (or international normalized ratio) and serum albumin. They reflect differing liver ‘functions’: excretion of anions (bilirubin), hepatocellular integrity (transaminases), formation and subsequent free flow of bile (bilirubin, ALP) and protein synthesis (albumin).


Bilirubin is formed through the turnover of red blood cells (RBCs, the ‘haem’ component). Unconjugated bilirubin is transported to the liver. It is water insoluble and therefore cannot be excreted. Within the liver, it is conjugated to bilirubin glucuronide and subsequently secreted into the bile and gut. Serum bilirubin is mainly present in an unconjugated form, reflecting a balance between production and hepatobiliary excretion. Unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia (indirect bilirubin fraction >85% of total bilirubin) occurs with increased bilirubin production, as in haemolysis or ineffective erythropoiesis, or in defects in hepatic uptake or conjugation, which may be inherited (as in Gilbert syndrome) or acquired. Conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia characteristically occurs in parenchymal liver disease and biliary obstruction.


Transaminases (aminotransferases), including AST and ALT, are markers of hepatocellular injury. They participate in gluconeogenesis by catalysing the transfer of amino groups from amino acids to ketoglutaric acid. AST is present in the liver, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle, kidneys, brain, pancreas, lungs, leukocytes and RBCs. AST is less sensitive and specific to the liver than ALT, a cytosolic enzyme found at its highest concentrations in the liver. Hepatocellular injury, but not necessarily cell death, triggers release of these enzymes into the circulation. An increase in liver transaminases is rather nonspecific, and common causes include acute hepatitis of any aetiology, NAFLD, alcoholic liver disease, chronic hepatitis B or C, autoimmune liver disease and drug injury.


Alkaline liver phosphatase originates mainly from liver and bone. An elevation may be physiological, especially during pregnancy and during adolescent growth. Hepatic ALP is present on the canalicular and luminal domains of the bile duct epithelium. ALP rises as a result of increased synthesis and consequent release into the circulation. Common causes of a rise in ALP are extrahepatic biliary obstruction, small bile duct disease and drug-induced cholestasis.


γ-Glutamyltransferase (GGT) is an enzyme expressed in hepatocytes and biliary epithelial cells. Although GGT is a sensitive test of hepatobiliary disease, its usefulness is limited by lack of specificity, since high levels may be seen in pancreatic disease, myocardial infarction, renal failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes and alcoholism. Along with other enzyme abnormalities, a rise in GGT supports a hepatobiliary source. A rise in GGT with high transaminase levels and an AST/ALT ratio of 2 : 1 or more suggests alcohol-related liver disease.


Albumin synthesis is an important function of the liver. With progressive liver disease, serum albumin levels fall, reflecting decreased synthesis. The albumin level depends on a number of other factors, such as nutritional status, catabolism, hormonal factors and urinary and gastrointestinal losses. The albumin concentration correlates with the prognosis in chronic liver disease. The synthesis of coagulation factors (except for factor VIII) is an important function of the liver. The prothrombin time (PT) measures the rate of conversion of prothrombin to thrombin (requiring factors II, V, VII and X) and thus reflects a vital synthetic function of the liver. PT may therefore be prolonged in liver disease and consumptive coagulopathy. The international normalized ratio (INR) is often tested now along with or instead of PT. (INR = Patient PT/Mean control PT.) This is helpful because INR avoids inter-laboratory variability in PT; its interpretation is otherwise similar to PT.


Prognosis indices and blood test algorithms


The prognosis of liver diseases can be evaluated by blood sample analysis. Most useful are the Child–Pugh–Turcotte (CPT) classification for prediction of cirrhosis, the model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) for assessing the prognosis of patients with severely impaired liver function in the context of liver transplantation and the Maddrey discriminant function for predicting risk of mortality in alcoholic hepatitis. Interestingly, these indices are often combined and include serum measurements and other clinical or pathological factors ( Table 2.4 ).



Table 2.4

Main prognostic indices for chronic liver disease






























Index Indication Description
Child–Pugh–Turcotte (CPT) classification Cirrhosis mortality Ascites (no = 0, medically controlled = 1, poorly controlled + 3) +
Encephalopathyl (no = 1, medically controlled = 2, poorly controlled = 3) +
Total bilirubin (<34 µmol/L = 1, 34–50 µmol/L = 2, >50 µmol/L = 3) +
Albumin (>35 g/L = 1, 28–35 g/L = 2, <28 g/L = 3) +
INR (<1.7 = 1, 1.7–2.2 = 2, >2.2 = 3)
Class A : Score 5–6; Class B : Score 7–9; Class C : Score >10
Model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) End-stage liver disease MELD score = (0.957 × ln (Serum creatinine) + 0.378 × ln (Serum bilirubin) + 1.120 × ln (INR) + 0.643) × 10 (if haemodialysis, value for creatinine is automatically set to 4.0)
Maddrey discriminant function Alcoholic hepatitis Discriminant function = 4.6 × (Patient PT − Control PT) + Total bilirubin

INR, International normalized ratio; PT, prothrombin time.


Since fibrosis is the hallmark of all chronic liver diseases, and because fibrosis is the main determinant of clinical outcome, several groups are investigating whether serum might predict the stage of liver fibrosis and help to follow its progression. Algorithms have been developed combining different blood components and clinical parameters that correlate with fibrosis stage as evaluated on liver biopsy. Some of these combinations have been reported to predict the presence of bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis with considerable diagnostic accuracy. However, they have only limited accuracy for predicting earlier hepatic fibrosis stages. Furthermore, the performance of fibrosis biomarkers at differentiating between adjacent scores of hepatic fibrosis is very limited. All such drawbacks limit their use for individual patients. The potential for more sophisticated extracellular matrix (ECM)-derived serum components has also been assessed. These include hyaluronic acid, products of collagen synthesis or degradation, enzymes involved in matrix biosynthesis or degradation, ECM glycoproteins and proteoglycans. However, the diagnostic accuracy of these ECM components in predicting liver fibrosis is limited. Furthermore, in order for these markers to reflect hepatic fibrogenesis or fibrosis accurately, they need to be organ specific, and the biological half-life should be independent of urinary and biliary excretion as well as sinusoidal endothelial uptake. Unfortunately, none of the available serum biomarkers fulfills all these criteria. Therefore biochemical blood tests have only limited value in predicting fibrosis stage; indeed, several studies have concordantly shown that their use may render liver biopsy unnecessary in only a minority of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus.


Proteomic approaches


The serum proteome describes the whole pool of proteins expressed in a biological milieu at a given time, and this overall evaluation is potentially relevant for disease diagnosis. In comparison to the previously described approach, mining of the proteome does not require an a priori hypothesis concerning the physiopathology of the liver disease. Therefore the challenge in clinical proteomic studies is to link global proteome profile variations to specific liver disease phenotypes and to elucidate relevant biomarkers in order to develop diagnostic or prognostic tools. Differences in protein patterns (profiling) between different conditions can then be detected. The possibility of rapidly obtaining and comparing profiles directly from the original source material and without laborious sample preparation makes this technique a promising possibility for clinical application. Using this technology, specific serum profiles have been delineated for the diagnosis of hepatic malignancy, liver fibrosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, but none of these discoveries has yet been applied to clinical diagnosis. However, with the development of new technologies such as high-throughput robust proteomic methods, some progress might be expected in the near future.


Metabolomics uses a similar approach but targets smaller molecules, which are intermediate or end-products of a chemical process using various analytical technologies. This nontargeted approach is looking for chemical imprints of a pathophysiological process present in a biological milieu. In the field of chronic liver disease, metabolomics (and lipidomics) is actively investigated in the context of NAFLD.


Liquid biopsy


So-called liquid biopsies are noninvasive blood tests that can detect circulating tumour cells (CTCs), fragments of tumour DNA (ctDNA) or cell-free RNA (cfRNA) that are shed into the blood from the primary tumour and from metastatic sites. This technology has potential diagnostic and treatment implications for oncology because it might avoid an invasive liver biopsy. Theoretically, a liquid biopsy may avoid the limit of tumour heterogeneity by capturing the entire heterogeneity of the disease. Because it is a safe procedure, liquid biopsy may also help to monitor tumour genomic changes in real time. Although there are some promising results in areas other than the liver, convincing results are still lacking in the field of liver tumours.


Current imaging techniques and progress in imaging procedures


Over the past 25 years, the role of imaging in the diagnosis and treatment of liver diseases has grown dramatically, with continued development of current ultrasound, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Each modality has undergone refinement, enabling more precise anatomical characterization of liver disease. New contrast agents have become available for all modalities, and some agents, particularly for MRI, have opened the way to better functional assessment. Integration of new physical modalities such as elastometry has also widened their field of investigation. The choice of method is largely dependent on the nature of the clinical problem and the availability of techniques.


Ultrasonography


Ultrasound is the first-line imaging technique for examination of the hepatobiliary system. Along with morphological exploration, US is an easy approach to performing interventional procedures and liver biopsy. With contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS), intravenous injection enables microbubbles to be detected when destroyed by the interaction with the US wave, allowing dynamic evaluation of liver structure.


In the context of chronic liver diseases, the accuracy of US is limited. Fatty infiltration produces increased reflectivity of hepatic parenchyma (bright liver), although this is observed only for abundant steatosis. Accuracy at discriminating different stages of chronic liver disease is also limited, with the exception of overt cirrhosis, where indirect signs such as nodular liver surface, hypertrophy of the left and caudate lobe, ascites and splenomegaly are used for the diagnosis of cirrhosis. The ability to image hepatic blood flow noninvasively with the colour Doppler technique is a major benefit in US and has become the initial test of choice in detecting vascular complications after liver transplantation. US is also essential for the initial diagnostic workup of jaundice, because it promptly recognizes bile duct dilatation, the hallmark of obstructive jaundice, and is able to reveal the cause of obstruction. When a liver mass is suspected, US is also used as a first-line technique. Cysts are easily diagnosed with US, but solid tumours may typically require CT scan or MRI for characterization ( Fig. 2.5 ).




Figure 2.5


Ultrasound image of solitary biliary cyst.

Courtesy of Professor V. Vilgrain.


A recent extension to US is elastometry or elastography. Liver stiffness, as assessed by US, is obtained by measuring the velocity of propagation of a shock wave within the tissue (as with FibroScan, the first US technique, and more recent techniques such as ARFI or SUPERSONIC). Similarly, MRI can assess the viscoelastic properties of a tissue with a three-dimensional (3D) method. The rationale for elastometry is that normal liver is viscous and not favourable to wave propagation, whereas fibrosis increases the hardness of the tissue and favours more rapid propagation. Several wide-scale studies are now available supporting the hypothesis that stiffness increases with the stage of fibrosis, but becomes significant only at precirrhotic or cirrhotic stages. The main drawback to this approach is that additional space-occupying lesions such as steatosis, oedema and inflammation develop within an organ wrapped in a distensible but nonelastic envelope (Glisson capsule) and contribute to modifying liver texture, acting as a confounding factor when stiffness is involved.


Computed tomography


CT scanning technology is a radiological procedure that combines numerous x-ray images with the aid of a computer to generate cross-sectional views. Contrast is based on the difference in density or attenuation between tissues, which can be enhanced after intravenous contrast injection. Most liver lesions behave differently on multiphasic postcontrast examination. Therefore evaluation of liver lesion enhancement and that of liver parenchyma is crucial on late arterial phase, portal venous phase and delayed phase ( Fig. 2.6 ). The latest generation of multidetector CT and 3D reconstruction also provides angiographic quality assessment of hepatic vasculature. The isotropic nature of the acquired CT data permits high-quality multiplanar and 3D reconstruction of the pertinent anatomy, which can be helpful in surgical planning.




Figure 2.6


Computed tomography scan of liver metastases from a colonic adenocarcinoma with peripheral enhancement and central low density.

Courtesy of Professor V. Vilgrain.


Magnetic resonance imaging


MRI can be used for lesion characterization or as a problem-solving examination if results on multidetector CT or US examination are inconclusive or incomplete. MRI uses a powerful magnetic field and radiofrequency (RF) pulses. Magnetic field is used to align the nuclear magnetization of hydrogen atoms of water molecules in the body, while RF pulses are used to alter systematically the alignment of this magnetization. This causes the hydrogen nuclei to produce a rotating magnetic field detectable by the scanner. This signal can be manipulated by additional magnetic fields to build up enough information to construct an image of the liver ( Fig. 2.7 ).




Figure 2.7


Magnetic resonance image of a liver cavernous angioma. Left, T2-weighted sequence, and right, after contrast injection.

Courtesy of Professor V. Vilgrain.


The major advantage of MRI is its high-quality soft tissue contrast compared to other imaging techniques, with spatial resolution almost as good as the CT scan. Furthermore, MRI does not use ionizing radiation. Contrast can be further improved by non-specific extracellular contrast agents (chelates of gadolinium) and liver-specific contrast agents, some of which are excreted by the biliary system. These contrast agents are now routinely used for liver imaging and improve the sensitivity and specificity of hepatobiliary MRI.


For more than 25 years, MRI has been an established method for detecting the presence of hepatic steatosis. MRI exploits the fact that fat resonates more slowly than water. In addition, MRI is likely to play an increasingly important role in the evaluation of patients with chronic liver disease because of the possibility of performing multiparametric imaging combining conventional and functional sequences. These functional methods include, but are not limited to, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), perfusion-weighted MRI, MR elastography (MRE) and MR spectroscopy (MRS). DWI provides non-invasive quantification of water diffusion and microcapillary blood perfusion. Several studies have shown that the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of cirrhotic liver is lower than that of normal liver. Perfusion-weighted MRI can calculate most parameters of liver perfusion: total liver blood flow, mean transit time and arterial fraction. Liver fibrosis and cirrhosis are associated with alterations in liver perfusion secondary to pathophysiological alterations, including endothelial defenestration and collagen deposition in the space of Disse. MRE is an emerging diagnostic imaging technique for quantitatively assessing the mechanical properties of tissue. Clinical studies have suggested that MRE is an accurate method for diagnosing hepatic fibrosis, since MRE-measured hepatic stiffness increases with fibrosis stage.




Routine handling, fixation and staining of liver specimens


Handling and fixation


A carefully handled, processed and sectioned specimen of liver tissue is imperative for accurate morphological assessment and interpretation. Needle biopsy specimens must be handled carefully to prevent crush artefacts or fragmentation, but can be submitted complete for processing. Wedge specimens often need to be sectioned by parallel cuts perpendicular to the capsule at intervals of nearly 2 mm. The biopsy should promptly be transferred to fixative, since any delay will rapidly cause drying and autolytic changes in liver tissue that may impair biopsy interpretation. The sample should not be placed fresh on a paper towel or gauze because this rapidly dehydrates it. Routine fixation in 10% neutral buffered formalin is the usual approach and suffices for most purposes. It allows for subsequent application of most histochemical, immunohistochemical and some molecular biological procedures. A core needle biopsy requires at least 2–4 hours of fixation, although microwave processing can reduce this time. Given the small size of some of the needle specimens, especially those obtained through FNA biopsy, care must be taken to avoid overprocessing. A wedge biopsy requires longer fixation. Because of concern about possible toxic effects of formalin, a variety of other fixatives have been recommended in recent years, although they are not yet routinely used.


After paraffin processing, several sections should be cut through the paraffin block to ensure adequate examination of the tissue; serial sectioning may be useful when small, focal lesions such as granulomas, bile duct lesions or parasite eggs are suspected. For material obtained from FNA biopsy, it may be wise initially to cut and save blank slides for further investigation, since recutting can induce significant loss of material from the paraffin block.


Special techniques may require different handling of the liver sample. This is generally known beforehand, so that it can be properly prepared. Frozen sections may be indicated for specific histochemical techniques, such as neutral fat stains for the identification of microvesicular steatosis ( Fig. 2.8 ) or for evaluation of porphyrin or vitamin A fluorescence. Fresh or frozen hepatic tissue can also be saved for microbiological cultures or biochemical analysis to detect inborn errors in metabolism. Fixed material can be used quantitatively to assess stored substances such as iron, copper and other materials.




Figure 2.8


Steatosis. Staining of fat vesicles with Oil Red O on a frozen section.


For several molecular techniques, the liver sample needs to be snap-frozen into liquid nitrogen and stored at −80°C until use. Tissue can be embedded in optimal cutting temperature (OCT) compound before freezing, but this process may hamper recovery and analysis of several molecular components including proteins. When quick freezing cannot be performed immediately after sampling, the biopsy can be immerged in stabilizing reagents that offer acceptable preservation of nucleic acids for several hours.


Electron microscopy should be considered in certain cases, such as the identification of characteristic lesions of inborn metabolic disorders or viral infection not otherwise identified. For this purpose, small samples of up to 5 mm (gently cut into 1-mm fragments) must be preserved in ice-cold 3% glutaraldehyde for electron microscopy.


Staining


Recommendations for staining vary considerably between laboratories, but the minimum requirements include the haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stain and a reliable connective tissue stain (Masson trichrome, Sirius red). H&E is the mainstay of diagnostic histopathology. Although this stain can elucidate most histological features, a variety of special stains are often useful for identifying features that are otherwise not apparent in liver tissue. The decision as to which stains should be routinely used is largely a matter of personal preference.


Stains for connective tissues are among the most valuable. Trichrome stains reveal the extracellular matrix, normally present in portal tracts and the walls of larger hepatic vein branches; thus they conveniently highlight the amount and distribution of fibrosis ( Fig. 2.9 ). Because of background staining, trichrome stains also allow easy evaluation of liver architecture. Sirius red (or picrosirius red) provides highly detailed and contrasted staining of connective tissue. It is the optimal staining for the evaluation of mild or perisinusoidal fibrosis. Because of its high contrast, sirius red is recommended for morphometric assessment of fibrosis ( Fig. 2.10 ). The reticulin stain highlights a wide range of ECM components including those that normally delineate the hepatic plates ( Fig. 2.11 ). Therefore reticulin is most useful for readily evaluating alterations in hepatic architecture, such as areas of a collapsed framework when hepatocyte necrosis is present, thickening of the hepatic plates or nodular formation when liver cell regeneration occurs or loss of reticulin framework in hepatocellular carcinoma.




Figure 2.9


Normal liver. Portal tract stained with Masson trichrome.



Figure 2.10


Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. Sirius red staining highlights perisinusoidal fibrosis.



Figure 2.11


Perisinusoidal fibrosis network in an area of collapse stained with silver impregnation for reticulin staining.


An iron stain is usually routinely performed. It is a reliable means for detecting even scanty quantities of haemosiderin and is therefore useful in assessing the distribution and amount of iron overload ( Fig. 2.12 ). Grading systems of iron overload have been developed that take into consideration the intensity, shape and distribution of iron pigment after Perls staining (see Chapter 4 ). Because of its pale counterstain, this stain also accentuates bilirubin and lipofuscin pigments, which appear as striking green and yellow-brown tints, respectively. Copper can be detected directly by rhodanine or rubeanic acid methods, but staining may be inconsistent in tissue fixed in unbuffered formalin or other fixatives ( Fig. 2.13 ). Periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) stain with diastase predigestion (D-PAS) plays several diagnostic roles. It highlights lipofuscin and ceroid pigments within Kupffer cells, signifying foci of recent active hepatocellular injury ( Fig. 2.14 ). PAS also demonstrates the basement membranes of bile ducts and ductules and indicates the presence of various nonglycogen carbohydrates. The most well known of these are the cytoplasmic globules seen in periportal hepatocytes in α1-antitrypsin deficiency ( Fig. 2.15 ). PAS is the staining of choice for glycogen content evaluation. Unfortunately, routine formalin fixation may lead to glycogen leeching out of the cells; alcohol fixatives produce more reliable results in terms of glycogen content.




Figure 2.12


Genetic haemochromatosis. Blue-stained haemosiderin granules in hepatocytes with Perls stain for iron.



Figure 2.13


Wilson disease. Granular deposits in liver cells. (Rhodanine stain.)



Figure 2.14


Swollen ceroid-laden macrophages stained with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) after diastase digestion.



Figure 2.15


Liver biopsy of patient with α1-antitrypsin deficiency. Globular inclusions of variable size stained with PAS after diastase digestion.


Orcein, Victoria blue and aldehyde fuchsin stains are markers of elastic fibres, which are normally distributed in parallel with collagen fibres ( Fig. 2.16 ). Since zones of developing fibrosis also acquire elastic fibres, these stains are helpful in distinguishing areas of acute hepatic necrosis from chronic fibrous septa. In addition, they stain hepatitis B surface antigen, which accumulates in cases of chronic hepatitis B infection, and identify so-called copper-associated proteins, insoluble aggregates of metallothionein within lysosomes. Additional histochemical stains, such as those for microorganisms, amyloid or fibrin, can be obtained as needed depending on the circumstances.




Figure 2.16


Orcein staining of connective tissue showing elastic fibres in black.


For cytological preparations, the fixative depends on the choice of stain to be used. Papanicolaou is the standard stain for alcohol-fixed material, whereas Romanowsky stains such as Diff-Quik (Baxter Diagnostics, West Sacramento, California) or May–Grünwald Giemsa are done on air-dried smears ( Fig. 2.17 ). For air-drying fixation, smears should be thinly spread, since air-drying artefacts may be misleading. However, rapid stains are usually good for assessment of cellularity, but not always optimal for detailed morphology and subtyping of liver tumours. Staining and ancillary techniques for cytology cell block specimens follow the same guidelines as for the liver biopsy core.


Sep 29, 2019 | Posted by in NEPHROLOGY | Comments Off on Cellular and Molecular Techniques

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