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Showing papers by "Hans J. Tanke published in 1998"


Journal Articleā€¢DOIā€¢
TL;DR: In this paper, comparative genomic hybridization was applied on four snap-frozen primary spermatocytic seminomas of three different patients. But, the results from comparative hybridization showed almost exclusively numerical chromosome aberrations, in agreement with the data from karyotyping.
Abstract: No data on the chromosomal constitution of spermatocytic seminomas are available thus far because of their rarity. Ploidy analysis performed on paraffin-embedded cases showed varying results from (near-) diploid to aneuploid. We applied comparative genomic hybridization on four snap-frozen primary spermatocytic seminomas of three different patients. Conventional cytogenetic analysis was successful in one, and "interphase cytogenetics" with centromeric region-specific probes was applied to another. The results from comparative genomic hybridization showed almost exclusively numerical chromosomal aberrations, in agreement with the data from karyotyping. Despite the limited number of cases studied, a nonrandom pattern of chromosome imbalances was detected: chromosome 9 was gained in all spermatocytic seminomas. This suggests that that this aberration plays a role in the development of this cancer. Interphase cytogenetics shows that the copy number of most chromosomes ranges from two to four, with an average of near trisomic. This constitutes the first report on the chromosomal constitution of spermatocytic seminomas.

60Ā citations


Journal Articleā€¢DOIā€¢
TL;DR: DAB staining is a straightforward way to screen for the presence of NRBCs in maternal blood, but is not specific forNRBCs of fetal origin, while HbF immunophenotyping is a reliable marker for fetal NR BCs, which detected slightly fewer NRBC's than DAB-staining, but improved sex prediction and significantly reduced false-positive results.
Abstract: A protocol to detect fetal nucleated red blood cells (NRBCs) was tested in 217 pregnant women and in 19 nonpregnant controls. All the pregnant women were sampled after chorionic villus sampling (CVS); 20 were also sampled pre-CVS. NRBC recognition was based upon morphology by using staining of hemoglobin with 3,3-diaminobenzidin (DAB) or by immunocytochemical staining for fetal hemoglobin (HbF), This was combined with FISH analysis for both the X- and Y-chromosomes on the same cells. Progressive refinement of the methods increased the number of cases where NRBCs were detected from 53% (DAB) to 75% and 78% for DAB and HbF staining, respectively, with on average 43 NRBCs (range, 1-220), DAB gave a slightly higher yield than HbF in the lower cell count range (<25), In 6 out of 18 controls, NRBCs were detected with DAB, vs. 1 out of 19 (5%) with HbF, FISH analysis in 41 cases resulted in correct sex prediction in 80% (DAB) and 89% (HbF), respectively. Our data demonstrated an increase of cases with NRBCs (30% to 75%), as well as a rise of the mean number of NRBCs (6 to 29 cells), after CVS, We conclude that DAB staining is a straightforward way to screen for the presence of NRBCs in maternal blood, but is not specific for NRBCs of fetal origin. HbF immunophenotyping is a reliable marker for fetal NRBCs, which detected slightly fewer NRBCs than DAB-staining, but improved sex prediction and significantly reduced false-positive results. CVS at 10-13 weeks of gestation causes a significant increase of NRBCs in maternal blood. These data indicate that further refinement of NRBC detection is needed before application of noninvasive prenatal diagnosis using maternal blood is feasible. (C) 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

50Ā citations


Journal Articleā€¢DOIā€¢
TL;DR: This is the first report of nonā€invasive prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 13, i.e. preā€CVS, in the first trimester, probably due to early impairment of the fetoā€maternal barrier.
Abstract: In a pilot study to establish fetal nucleated red blood cell (NRBC) detection in maternal blood, trisomy 13 was diagnosed by FISH analysis at 11 weeks' gestation. The NRBCs were detected after a single-step ficoll density gradient enrichment. In blood samples taken both before and after CVS, 52 and 80 NRBCs, respectively, were found to be positive for fetal haemoglobin. In 47 per cent of these cells, FISH analysis for X and Y chromosomes confirmed the fetal sex. Moreover, 48 per cent of these NRBCs showed three fluorescent signals for a chromosome 13 probe, which confirmed the diagnosis of trisomy 13, previously detected at CVS karyotyping. This is the first report of non-invasive prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 13, i.e., pre-CVS, in the first trimester. The high number of fetal NRBCs detected indicates a connection with aneuploidy, probably due to early impairment of the feto-maternal barrier.

46Ā citations


Journal Articleā€¢DOIā€¢
TL;DR: A twoā€colour immunocytochemical staining method for the detection of fetal and embryonic haemoglobin in erythroid cells was developed and the phenotype of erythroblasts circulating in the maternal blood appeared to be of the relatively small Ī³ globinā€containing cell type.
Abstract: We have developed a two-colour immunocytochemical staining method for the detection of fetal and embryonic haemoglobin in erythroid cells. The method was applied to study these haemoglobin types in fetal red cells. Specimens from fetal blood (10 weeks), cord blood and fetal liver (14 weeks) as well as chorionic villus samples (10-13 weeks) were stained for gamma and epsilon chains using CY3 and FITC labelled antibodies. Morphometric analysis was applied to determine cell size. Samples from organs involved in early embryonic development contained relatively large erythroblasts expressing the epsilon globin chain (megaloblasts); later in gestation the gamma chain was co-expressed by the same cells which ultimately became smaller and contained HbF (alpha 2 gamma 2) only. This phenomenon was confirmed in CVS samples in which all cell types were abundantly present. Since fetal erythroblasts are considered candidate cells for non-invasive prenatal diagnosis using FISH, we studied the phenotype of erythroblasts circulating in the maternal blood. The majority of erythroblasts in maternal blood appeared to be of the relatively small gamma globin-containing cell type. However, careful screening of the same maternal blood samples also revealed erythroblasts expressing epsilon or epsilon and gamma globins simultaneously, although at low frequency. Control specimens from non-pregnant women did not show nucleated red cells expressing either of the haemoglobin types. These observations may contribute to the better recognition of fetal cells in the maternal blood for prenatal diagnosis.

41Ā citations