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Qualitative Comparison of Cryostat- versus Snap-Frozen Neurosurgical Intraoperative Consultations.

David S PriemerTimothy WysozanFarhad ZahediNasr AlrabadiHector MesaAlexander O Vortmeyer
Published in: International journal of surgical pathology (2022)
Background: Frozen sections (FS) are common in neurosurgery to address varied clinical concerns. Artifacts in central nervous system (CNS) FS can be severe and affect or hinder interpretation. We performed a case-control study using a semiquantitative scale: the Histologic Preservation Score (HPS), and a quantitative scale: the Ice Crystal Vacuolization Score (ICVS), to compare the histologic quality yielded by snap- versus cryostat freezing techniques. Material and Methods: All specimens were sectioned in 2 halves, one half was used for FS and the other for permanent evaluation. HPS assigns a distortion score to the FS sample using the non-frozen half as the comparator: 1  =  minimal, 2  =  slight, 3  =  moderate, 4 & 5  =  severe. The ICVS is the average size in µm of the 5 largest vacuoles/0.05 mm 2 , evaluated on digitized slides. Results: 86 CNS-FS were collected: 22 snap- and 64 cryostat-FS. Significant differences in HPS: 2.28 versus 2.84 ( p <0.05 ) and ICVS 7.47 versus 14.56 ( p   <   0.001 ) were obtained for snap- versus cryostat-FS, respectively. HPS and ICVS showed a strong correlation: R 2  = 0.63, p   <   0.0001. Histologic distortion was worse for neuroglial than mesenchymal tissue by both methods; however, a significant difference was only observed in cryostat-FS: HPS: 3.23 versus 2.33, p   <   0.001 ; ICVS: 16.86 μm versus 10.26 μm, p   <   0.001 . Conclusion: Snap-FS yields better histologic quality than cryostat-FS for CNS-FS, and the difference is more pronounced in neuroglial samples. HPS and ICVS correlate strongly, indicating that the histologic quality is inversely proportional to water-crystallization. These results may apply to other areas of surgical pathology.
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