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Impact of pre-analytical and analytical variables associated with sample preparation on flow cytometric stainings obtained with EuroFlow panels

Authors :
European Commission
European Hematology Association
Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange
Silesian University of Technology
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Sedek, Lukasz
Flores-Montero, Juan
Sluijs-Gelling, Alita J. van der
Kulis, Jan
Marvelde, Jeroen G. te
Philippé, J.
Böttcher, Sebastian
Bitter, Marieke
Caetano, J.
Velden, Vincent H. J. van der
Sonneveld, Edwin
Buracchi, Chiara
Santos, Ana Helena
Lima, Margarida
Szczepanski, Tomasz
Dongen, J. J. M. van
Orfao, Alberto
European Commission
European Hematology Association
Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange
Silesian University of Technology
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Sedek, Lukasz
Flores-Montero, Juan
Sluijs-Gelling, Alita J. van der
Kulis, Jan
Marvelde, Jeroen G. te
Philippé, J.
Böttcher, Sebastian
Bitter, Marieke
Caetano, J.
Velden, Vincent H. J. van der
Sonneveld, Edwin
Buracchi, Chiara
Santos, Ana Helena
Lima, Margarida
Szczepanski, Tomasz
Dongen, J. J. M. van
Orfao, Alberto
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective interpretation of FC results may still be hampered by limited technical standardization. The EuroFlow consortium conducted a series of experiments to determine the impact of different variables on the relative distribution and the median fluorescence intensity (MFI) of markers stained on different cell populations, from both healthy donors and patients’ samples with distinct hematological malignancies. The use of different anticoagulants; the time interval between sample collection, preparation, and acquisition; pH of washing buffers; and the use of cell surface membrane-only (SM) vs. cell surface plus intracytoplasmic (SM+CY) staining protocols, were evaluated. Our results showed that only monocytes were represented at higher percentages in EDTA- vs. heparin-anticoagulated samples. Application of SM or SM+CY protocols resulted in slight differences in the percentage of neutrophils and debris determined only with particular antibody combinations. In turn, storage of samples for 24 h at RT was associated with greater percentage of debris and cell doublets when the plasma cell disorder panel was used. Furthermore, 24 h storage of stained cells at RT was selectively detrimental for MFI levels of CD19 and CD45 on mature B- and T-cells (but not on leukemic blasts, clonal B- and plasma cells, neutrophils, and NK cells). The obtained results showed that the variables evaluated might need to be tailored for sample and cell type(s) as well as to the specific markers compared; however, defining of well-balanced boundaries for storage time, staining-to-acquisition delay, and pH of washing buffer would be a valid recommendation for most applications and circumstances described herein.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1356199931
Document Type :
Electronic Resource