Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Methods and Protocols

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processed specimens. Other parameters such as tumor budding,
neoplastic phenotyping, and molecular markers (e.g., HER2
amplification) can be assessed if appropriate.

2 Materials



  1. Collect the specimen along with a completed pathology
    request form and prepare tissue cassettes

  2. Standard personal protection and dissection equipment


3 Methods



  1. Put on the personal protection equipment, prepare the dissec-
    tion equipment, check specimen identification matches on
    request form, specimen container label, and cassettes, and
    check dictation equipment (see Note 1).

  2. The specimen must be adequately fixed, after being pinned to
    a board by the endoscopist (gastroenterologist) (see Note 2
    and Fig. 1a–c).

  3. Record the specimen description. The following features
    should be described:



  • Number of pieces of specimen received.

  • Specimen size.

  • Orientation (if provided); standard orientation is to iden-
    tify proximal and distal ends of the specimen.

  • Specimen integrity (whether it is intact, disrupted, or with
    defects).

  • Any macroscopic tumor noted.

  • If the tumor is found, measure the size and note the
    appearance (Nodular/polypoid/ulcerated).

  • Distance of the lesion from visible lesion to the margins.

  • Photograph the specimen (see Note 3).



  1. Ink the margins according to orientation (see Note 4).

  2. Slice the specimen according to Fig. 2 and embed the entire
    specimen (see Note 5).
    *Accurate microscopic examination essentially depends on sat-
    isfactory handling of the specimen (see Note 6).


Benjamin M. Allanson and M. Priyanthi Kumarasinghe
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