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Immunohistochemistry Innovations for Diagnosis and Tissue-Based Biomarker Detection.

Narittee SukswaiJoseph D Khoury
Published in: Current hematologic malignancy reports (2020)
Advances in clinical-grade immunohistochemistry techniques have allowed labs to develop and validate multiplex assays that improve diagnostic utility-such as CD5/PAX5 and TCF4/CD123 dual-color stains-and have the potential to enhance the specificity of biomarker detection. In addition, the increased availability of immunohistochemistry assays that detect mutant proteins (e.g., BRAF V600E and IDH1 R132H) provides a helpful replacement and/or adjunct for molecular testing. These techniques are highly reproducible, entail reasonable technical and interpretation complexity, and are relatively cost-effective, making them valuable novel tools in modern cancer care. Multiplex and mutation-specific immunohistochemistry assays represent important innovations that provide improved utility in the context of personalized medicine and targeted therapy.
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