polariscopic examination immunofluorescence
Transcription
polariscopic examination immunofluorescence
4 Figure 4-2 Elastic fibers. This Verhoeff-van Gieson stain demonstrates the darkly staining normal elastic fibers of the skin. Several special stains for elastic tissue are available. The most commonly used stains are the Verhoeff-van Gieson stain (Fig. 4-2) or Weigert resorcin-fuchsin. Additional techniques, such as the Luna stain and the Miller stain, may allow better visualization of elastic fibers than traditional methods (4). These stains are beneficial in the diagnosis of anetoderma, connective tissue nevi, mid-dermal elastolysis, and other alterations of elastic tissue. The Giemsa stain is frequently used to highlight mast cells. Giemsa contains methylene blue, a metachromatic stain. The granules of a mast cell stain metachromatically purple (Fig. 4-3). POLARISCOPIC EXAMINATION Polariscopic examination is the examination of histologic sections under the microscope with polarized light, that is, light from which all waves except those vibrating in one plane are excluded. ■ LABORATORY METHODS 79 For polariscopic examination, two disks made of polarizing plastics are placed on the microscope. One disk is placed below the condenser of the microscope and acts as the polarizer. The second disk is placed in the eyepiece of the microscope or on top of the glass slide and acts as the analyzer. When one of the two disks is rotated so that the path of the light through the two disks is broken at a right angle, the field is dark. However, when doubly refractile substances are introduced between the two disks, they break the polarization and are visible as bright white bodies in the dark field. Polariscopic examination is useful in evaluating lipid deposits, certain foreign bodies, gout, and amyloid. With regard to lipids, it is not fully known why certain lipids are doubly refractile and others are not. In general, cholesterol esters are doubly refractile, but free cholesterol, phospholipids, and neutral fat are not. Only formalin-fixed, frozen sections can be used for a polariscopic examination for lipids. Doubly refractile lipids are regularly present in the tuberous and plane xanthomas and xanthelasmata (but not always in the eruptive xanthomas) of hyperlipoproteinemia, in the cutaneous lesions of diffuse normolipemic plane xanthoma, and in the vascular walls of angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Fabry disease) (see Chapter 33). Doubly refractile lipids are present, as long as the cutaneous lesions contain a sufficient amount of lipids, in histiocytosis X (Hand–Schüller–Christian type) (see Chapter 26), in juvenile xanthogranuloma (see Chapter 26), in erythema elevatum diutinum (extracellular cholesterosis) (see Chapter 8), and in dermatofibroma (lipidized “histiocytoma”) (see Chapter 32). Doubly refractile lipids are absent in lipid-containing lesions, as a rule, in necrobiosis lipoidica (see Chapter 14), in hyalinosis cutis et mucosae or lipoid proteinosis (see Chapter 17), and in multicentric reticulohistiocytosis and solitary reticulohistiocytic granuloma (see Chapter 26). Among foreign bodies, silica causes granulomas showing doubly refractile spicules. These granulomas are caused either by particles of soil or glass (silicon dioxide) or by talcum powder (magnesium silicate) (see Chapter 14). Wooden splinters, suture material, and starch granules are also doubly refractile. An example of polariscopic examination is seen in Fig. 4-4. Gouty tophi show double refraction of the urate crystals if the crystals are sufficiently preserved. They are preserved by the use of alcohol rather than formalin for fixation (see Chapter 17). Amyloid shows a characteristic green birefringence in polarized light after staining with alkaline Congo red (see Chapter 17). IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE TESTING Figure 4-3 Giemsa stain. Mast cell cytoplasmic granules are purple. Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 79 Immunofluorescence testing is a specialized technique that is beneficial in the diagnosis of certain skin disorders (5,6). Two immunofluorescence methods are commonly 08/08/14 2:05 am 80 LEVER’S HISTOPATHOLOGY OF THE SKIN Table 4-2 Multistep Scheme for the Interpretation of Cutaneous Direct Immunofluorescence Figure 4-4 Polariscopic examination. In this talc granuloma, polariscopy reveals hundreds of refractile foreign bodies within the dermis. used in dermatology: direct immunofluorescence testing (DIF), which probes for immunoreactants localized in patients’ skin or mucous membranes, and indirect immunofluorescence testing, which is used to identify and titer circulating autoantibodies in the patient’s serum. A modified indirect immunofluorescence technique using the patient’s skin as a substrate, known as immunomapping, is used to determine the site of cleavage or abnormalities in the distribution of mutated proteins in various forms of hereditary epidermolysis bullosa. DIRECT IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE Direct immunofluorescence testing has a valuable diagnostic role in several autoimmune and inflammatory mucocutaneous diseases, including autoimmune-mediated blistering diseases, dermatitis herpetiformis, Henoch– Schöenlein purpura (immunoglobulin [Ig] A vasculitis), and cutaneous lupus erythematosus. The role of direct immunofluorescence as a diagnostic procedure is important but not critical in other dermatoses, such as dermatomyositis, cutaneous porphyrias, pseudoporphyria, lichen planus, and vasculitides other than Henoch–Schöenlein purpura (7). Table 4-2 illustrates a stepwise schematic for evaluation of immunofluorescence sections prior to making an immunopathologic diagnosis. Biopsy Techniques A 3- to 4-mm punch biopsy is generally adequate. In the group of autoimmune blistering diseases, an inflamed but unblistered perilesional area is the ideal specimen. Blistered-lesional sampling is the most common cause of false-negative results. On the other hand, sampling too Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 80 Real vs. artifact Relevant vs. irrelevant Specific vs. nonspecific ↓ Location of immunofluorescence (Epithelial, basement membrane zone, vascular) ↓ Dominant immunoreactant (Immunoglobulin [Ig] G? IgA? IgM? C3? Fibrin?) ↓ Characteristics (Granular? Linear) ↓ Diagnostic algorithm based on IF patterns distant from the blistering also can cause false-negative results. In a few cases of pemphigus, pemphigoid, and epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, false-positive results can occur in blistered lesions. Of note, due to the often focal and skipping nature of the immunoreactants in dermatitis herpetiformis, a shave biopsy often provides a broader surface with which to evaluate dermal papillae than a punch biopsy. The performance of an adequate perilesional biopsy in mucosal lesions is often not feasible, and thus a high incidence of false negatives and even false positives may occur in these specimens. In patients with desquamative gingivitis secondary to mucous membrane pemphigoid, an easy way to obtain sampling is by the so-called peeling technique, in which rubbing the perilesional affected gingivae with a cotton swab induces a “fresh peeling of the mucosa.” In most cases of mucous membrane pemphigoid, the 180- and 230-kD hemidesmosomal antigens are the autoantigens; therefore, the hemidesmosomes will be available for interpretation in the peeled gingivae specimens, and a linear immunostaining with “capping” phenomenon is observed (8). It has been reported that there is a theoretical higher incidence of false-negative results in bullous pemphigoid lesions from lower extremities; however, this finding has not been confirmed by others. In asymptomatic dermatitis herpetiformis patients who have strictly adhered to a gluten-free diet for less than 6 months, or even patients that have not done so but remain lesion-free due to dapsone therapy, wide-shaved specimens from the elbows or any other classically affected area will still show the typical IgA deposits at the tips of dermal papillae (9). 08/08/14 2:05 am 4 In autoimmune and inflammatory disorders other than autoimmune blistering diseases in which direct immunofluorescence plays an important role, the specimens should be taken from lesional areas, including cutaneous lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, vasculitides, lichen planus, cutaneous porphyria, and pseudoporphyria. Transport and Processing of Biopsy Specimens Tissue for immunofluorescence studies should be obtained fresh and kept moist until it is quickly frozen. Skin specimens can be kept on saline-moistened gauze and transported immediately to the laboratory if it is nearby. If it cannot be transported in less than 24 hours, the specimen should be put into Michel transport medium. This medium is composed of 5% ammonium sulfate, the potassium inhibitor N-ethylmaleimide, and magnesium sulfate in citrate buffer (pH 7.25). This solution is stable at room temperature but must be kept in a tightly capped container to prevent absorption of CO2 and acidification. Specimens stored in Michel medium are stable for at least 4 weeks at room temperature. Specimens stored in Michel medium and kept in the refrigerator can be preserved for several weeks or even months. This method of transportation has made the direct immunofluorescence technique much more readily applicable. When the specimen is received in a laboratory, the ammonium sulfate is washed out and the specimen is oriented and embedded in OCT (optimal cutting temperature) compound and then the specimen is snap frozen. The tissue is then sectioned at 6 μm. The frozen sections are incubated with antihuman antibodies to IgG, IgA, IgM, C3, C5b-9, and fibrinogen. These antibodies are linked to a fluorescent label such as fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) to allow visualization using a fluorescence microscope (7). ■ LABORATORY METHODS 81 Some cases of subepidermal blistering disorders with deposition of immune reactants may be difficult to differentiate from one another. The typical example is pemphigoid and epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, both subepidermal blistering diseases with C3 and/or IgG deposition on DIF (Fig. 4-5). In these cases, a technique called salt-split direct immunofluorescence often circumvents this problem. Direct immunofluorescence salt-split skin analysis can only be performed if the specimen sent for DIF is not already blistered. This technique consists of thawing the frozen specimen formerly used for routine direct immunofluorescence and incubating it in 1 M NaCl for 48 to 72 hours, allowing for separation of the epidermis from the dermis. Following the incubation in NaCl, new sections of frozen skin are cut and incubated with antibodies linked to FITC, similar to the standard DIF testing. This salt cleaves the basement membrane zone through the lamina lucida, leaving the hemidesmosomes on the epidermal side and deeper-seated proteins such as type VII collagen and epiligrin on the dermal side of an artificially induced blister. Therefore, in virtually all cases of bullous pemphigoid, the linear IgG immunostaining will be localized on the epidermal side (occasionally epidermal and dermal) and in epidermolysis bullosa acquisita on the dermal side. Direct Immunofluorescence Interpretation Autoimmune Blistering Diseases Sensitivity of direct immunofluorescence with active autoimmune blistering disease should be close to 100%. If it is not, it is likely due to technical reasons (10). In pemphigus vulgaris (PV) and pemphigus foliaceus (PF), the IgG immunostaining on the epithelial cell surfaces can be granular and/or linear, giving a characteristic “chicken wire” pattern. C3 staining may also be detected, and rarely, IgA. Nonspecific patchy granular staining along the basement membrane is not uncommon, especially in mucosal lesions. In paraneoplastic pemphigus the IgG “chicken wire” immunostaining tends to be linear, thick, and homogeneous throughout the epidermis and mucosal specimens, including those from bronchi with or without a concomitant linear basement membrane staining (11). Lichenoid mucosal and even cutaneous lesions in paraneoplastic pemphigus tend to show focal granular IgG and other immunoreactants along the basement membrane without the typical “chicken wire” pattern. Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 81 Figure 4-5 Direct immunofluorescence. Bullous pemphigoid. Continuous linear C3 staining along the basement membrane zone. 08/08/14 2:05 am 82 LEVER’S HISTOPATHOLOGY OF THE SKIN Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus Direct immunofluorescence has a significant value in the evaluation of patients with active cutaneous connective tissue disease. The intensity of the deposits of immunoreactants along the basement membrane in these patients correlates with the degree of interface/lichenoid dermatitis/mucositis. In discoid lupus erythematosus, granular immune reactants (IgG, IgA, IgM, and C3) are present along the dermal–epidermal junction. The most common immunoreactant visualized with direct immunofluorescence is IgM; in systemic lupus erythematosus and in subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus it is IgG. Of note, most patients with anti-Ro-positive subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus may have a characteristic granular IgGspeckling pattern along the basement membrane and throughout the epidermis. The lupus band test, originally described as positive when granular IgG is present along the basement membrane zone in specimens from sunprotected nonlesional areas, is rapidly being abandoned due to its unreliability and the availability of more reliable methods for the early diagnosis and prediction of systemic disease in lupus erythematosus (Chapter 10) (12,13). In cutaneous lesions of dermatomyositis, dense, granular C5b-9 (membrane attack complex) deposition at the basement membrane zone and upper dermal vessels along with that of weaker C3, IgG, and IgM deposits is a quite characteristic immunofluorescence pattern that often helps to distinguish dermatomyositis from lupus erythematosus spectrum, namely in acute phases of these diseases (14,15) (Fig. 4-6). Cutaneous Vasculitides Direct immunofluorescence evaluation is a very important diagnostic tool in the workup of cutaneous small vessel vasculitis, especially Henoch–Schöenlein purpura. The best immunofluorescence diagnostic yield in Henoch– Schöenlein purpura is obtained from 1- to 2-day-old lesions. As lesions get older, the IgA deposits get degraded and cleared. Because most patients have older lesions at the time of the evaluation, a high index of suspicion is required and exhaustive search for scant granular IgA deposits in very superficial papillary dermis is mandatory before ruling out Henoch–Schöenlein purpura. Hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis is another small-vessel vasculitis in which direct immunofluorescence plays a critical diagnostic role. In this type of cutaneous vasculitis, granular IgG and C3 deposits are seen in and around small dermal vessels and along the basement membrane zone. The presence of basement membrane granular immunostaining among other clinical and serologic findings in patients with hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis has led some authors to believe that this vasculitis is no more than a subset of systemic lupus erythematosus (16). Other Autoimmune and Inflammatory Skin Diseases Lichen planus lesions, mainly the mucosal variant, are characterized by typical yet not pathognomonic, linear and shaggy fibrinogen deposits and patchy granular IgM and C3 along the basement membrane. The direct immunofluorescence findings in cutaneous porphyrias are indistinguishable from those seen in pseudoporphyria. These findings are characterized by thick and glassy linear IgG and IgA deposits in superficial dermal vessels in a “doughnut pattern” and along the basement membrane. It is believed that immunoglobulins become trapped and bound to glycoproteins in a thickened basement membrane zone and degenerated blood vessels in this disorder. INDIRECT IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE Indirect immunofluorescence is a semiquantitative procedure in which immunolabeling is carried out to evaluate the presence and titer of circulating antibodies or specifically to localize antigen in the skin. Figure 4-6 Cutaneous Ro-positive cutaneous lupus erythematosus (idiopathic or drug induced) and dermatomyositis direct immunofluorescence patterns. Left: Ro-positive cutaneous lupus erythematosus (idiopathic or drug induced). Granular IgG-speckling “dusting” pattern throughout the epidermis (keratinocyte cytoplasmic) with mild deposits at the basement membrane zone and an often in vivo antinuclear antibody pattern highlighting keratinocyte nuclei. Right: Dermatomyositis. Dense granular C5b-9 (membrane attack complex) deposits along the basement membrane zone and upper dermal vessels. Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 82 Indirect Immunofluorescence in the Evaluation of Circulating Antiepithelial Antibodies Blood is drawn into a tube without anticoagulant, and the serum is serially diluted. Substrates most commonly used are 6-μm frozen sections of monkey esophagus, human salt-split skin, and murine bladder. The substrate is incubated with serum dilutions for 30 minutes at room temperature and then washed; antibodies bound to the 08/08/14 2:06 am 4 substrates are detected by incubation with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled goat antihuman IgG and/or IgA. Monkey esophagus is probably the best substrate for the evaluation of antiepithelial surface antibodies specifically for PV. PF has a high incidence of false-negative results with this substrate, and normal human skin can be used as a substrate if PF is suspected and there is a negative result using monkey esophagus. Low titers of antiepithelial surface antibodies up to 1:80 or even higher can also be seen in control sera (17). In PV and PF, antidesmoglein antibodies give a “chicken wire” staining pattern (Fig. 4-7). It may be more prominent on superficial epithelial cells, whereas in paraneoplastic pemphigus the antiplakin antibodies give a pattern that is consistently homogeneous throughout the epithelium and sometimes is even associated with immunostaining along the basement membrane zone. Transitional epithelium is a plakin-rich substrate, and thus murine bladder is a common substrate for the screening of circulating antiplakin antibodies in paraneoplastic pemphigus (18). Exceptional cases of PV and PF and pemphigoid can have concomitant low-titer antidesmoplakin antibodies. Monkey esophagus is also a useful substrate in the indirect immunofluorescence screening for subepidermal autoimmune blistering disease. However, human salt-split skin renders better definition of the subtypes of subepidermal blistering disorders. Disorders characterized by antibodies to hemidesmosomal proteins BP180 and BP230, including those seen in bullous and gestational pemphigoid, some cases of mucous membrane pemphigoid, and linear IgA bullous disease, are associated with a linear immunostaining on the epidermal side (roof) of the salt-split human skin (Fig. 4-8). On the other hand, patients with circulating antibodies reacting against type VII collagen and antiepiligrin ■ LABORATORY METHODS 83 Figure 4-8 Bullous pemphigoid: thin wavy linear IgG deposition along the epidermal (roof) side of salt split basement membrane zone. (laminin 5), as is seen in epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (Fig. 4-9) and antiepiligrin mucous membrane pemphigoid (Fig. 4-10), respectively, have circulating IgG autoantibodies that bind the dermal side of the salt-split human skin. In bullous systemic lupus erythematosus, staining is also seen on the floor of the salt-split skin, and nuclear staining of keratinocytes may be present (Fig. 4-11). More sensitive and specific assays for the evaluation of circulating autoantibodies, including enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for antidesmoglein and anti-BP180 antibodies, immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation for pemphigoid, epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, and antiepiligrin, and immunoprecipitation for paraneoplastic pemphigus, have been recently incorporated into the diagnostic armamentarium of autoimmune blistering diseases. ELISA Testing for Immunobullous Disorders ELISA has been developed to detect autoantibodies associated with specific immunobullous disorders. The ELISA Figure 4-7 Pemphigus vulgaris. Indirect immunofluorescence with monkey esophagus substrate. Anti-IgG staining of epithelium showing a “chicken wire” pattern. Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 83 Figure 4-9 Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita: thick “ribbontype” linear IgG deposition along the dermal (floor) side of saltsplit basement membrane zone. 08/08/14 2:06 am 84 LEVER’S HISTOPATHOLOGY OF THE SKIN Figure 4-10 Antilaminin 5 (laminin 332, epiligrin) pemphigoid: thin linear IgG deposition along the dermal (floor) side of salt-split basement membrane zone. test applied to immunobullous disorders uses the autoantigen as the target and screens the patient’s sera for autoantibodies. ELISA testing for autoantibodies reactive against desmoglein 1 (Dsg1) and desmoglein 3 (Dsg3) and bullous pemphigoid antigen 180 (BP180) and bullous pemphigoid antigen 230 (BP230) have shown diagnostic utility in a number of studies. In one study examining sera from pemphigus patients, ELISA to detect IgG autoantibodies against Dsg 1 and Dsg 3 was performed on 317 controls, 82 patients with PV and 25 with PF (19). The Dsg 3 ELISA was positive in all 34 patients with untreated PV and the Dsg 1 ELISA was positive in all 10 patients with untreated PF. When patients undergoing treatment were included, the sensitivities fell to 95% and 92%, respectively, but still compared favorably to the sensitivity of indirect immunofluorescence which was 79% in PV and 84% in PF. All PF sera were negative in the Dsg 3 ELISA and the specificity of both assays was 98% or greater. The Dsg 1 and Dsg 3 ELISAs also provided reproducible data which allowed differentiation of PV from PF. The sensitivity and specificity of a commercially available BP180-NC16a domain ELISA has been compared to that of indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) testing in the evaluation of bullous pemphigoid (BP) and pemphigoid gestationis (PG) (20). ELISA was performed on serum from 28 patients (24 BP, 4 PG) and 50 controls. IIF testing was performed on serum from 27 patients and 98 controls. ELISA for BP180-NC16a had a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 96% (P < .001), while sensitivity was 74% and specificity 96% (P < .001) for IIF. These results indicate that ELISA has a higher sensitivity than IIF testing, but similar specificity. Further evaluation of controls who had IgG deposition on the dermal side of salt-split skin on DIF testing showed specificity for the ELISA of 100% (all four cases negative) and 80% for IIF testing (one of five positive). Overall, ELISA has greater sensitivity and specificity for BP or PG than does IIF. Together, these studies and others suggest that ELISA testing for autoantigens is more sensitive than IIF and is likely to be used with greater frequency in the future, given that larger numbers of samples can be analyzed in a relatively short time period. Immunofluorescence for the Evaluation of Site of Cleavage in Hereditary Epidermolysis Bullosa This technique offers a practical, yet useful diagnostic tool in hereditary epidermolysis bullosa by revealing the site of the defect in these mechanobullous disorders. Thus, this technique classifies these disorders into epidermolytic, functional, and dermolytic categories (Table 4-3). In brief, this technique is performed as follows: A freshly induced blister is obtained by twisting a Table 4-3 Indirect Immunofluorescence for the Evaluation of Site of Cleavage in Hereditary Epidermolysis Bullosa (HEB) Type of HEB Figure 4-11 Bullous systemic lupus erythematosus: thick “ribbon-type” linear IgG deposition along the dermal (floor) side of salt-split basement membrane zone in combination with strong in vivo antinuclear antibody pattern in keratinocytes and dermal cells. Elder9781451190373-ch004.indd 84 Epidermolytic (simplex) Junctional Dermolytic Anti-type IV Collagen Anti-BP180 Immunostaining Immunostaining Floor Floor Roof Roof Floor Roof 08/08/14 2:06 am