AUSTRALASIAN FLOW
CYTOMETRY GROUP
JULY 1996
RECOMMENDED
GUIDELINE STANDARDS
FOR LEUKAEMIA AND LYMPHOMA PHENOTYPING
1994/1995 COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Dr Simon Bol, Mr Greg Bryson, Dr
Margaret Cooley, Ms Sue Francis
Ms Helen Hanlin, Mr
Stephen Hunter, Mr Lyndsay Peters, Dr Henry Preston
Mr Steve Rockman, Mr Joseph Webster
1996 COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Dr Simon Bol, Mr Peter Hobson, Mr
Arnold Kabral
Terms of reference for the AFCG
leukaemia and lymphoma phenotyping standards committee
1. Committee composition: To be broadly based with a variety of
experience
2. Quality control: To examine methods for inter- and intra-laboratory
quality assurance for all areas of flow cytometry.
3. To report to the AFCG members on
the recommendations for minimum standards for leukaemia and lymphoma
phenotyping.
4. To work towards establishing a joint
AFCG / RCPA Quality Assurance program directed specifically at
clinical flow cytometry.
CONTENTS
Controls for Immunophenotyping
Flow Cytometer Quality Control
Appendix: Log Book Forms
These recommendations are presented
with a view to being a minimum standard. These recommendations
should not be seen to restrict the ability of any individual.
This document will be reviewed regularly to ensure that these
recommendations embrace current accepted laboratory practices.
The aim of leukaemia and lymphoma phenotyping
is to identify the cell type of the neoplastic process. This phenotypic
identification should outline the cell lineage and level of maturation,
as an aid to the classification of the leukaemia or lymphoma.
Further, this phenotypic identification should assist in the determination
as to whether the cell population is normal or abnormal and in
the detection of a previously characterised population of cells
in a sample for monitoring the disease remission, development,
or recurrence.
These assays are usually performed on
blood or bone marrow specimens; however, other body fluids or
tissues may have to be examined.
These guidelines are written in broad
terms as a gesture to indicate and not to dictate.
Each laboratory will adopt internal
procedures and policies for the safe handling of biological specimens.
1. Use universal precautions1
with all specimens.
2. Develop appropriate internal procedures
to cope with accidents such as spillages.
3. Handle and manipulate specimens in
a safe biological confinement area wherever possible.
4. Fix cell samples with a 0.5% to 1%
available formaldehyde-based solution, close the test tubes, and
fix for a minimum of 15 mins before analysing on the flow cytometer.
5. Final cell suspension should be in
a 0.5% 1% available formaldehyde-based solution.
6. Unfixed samples outside the safe
handling area should be capped.
7. Appropriate safety devices such as
gloves, gowns, goggles, centrifuge carriers, automatic pipetting
are recommended whenever handling and processing specimens. Use
disposable plastic equipment wherever possible.
8. Wash hands with medicated soap after
working with specimens, removing gloves, or when leaving the laboratory,
and as in accordance with usual local laboratory policy and universal
precautions.
9. For decontamination of flow cytometers
refer to the instrument manufacturer's recommended procedures.
10. Liquid waste should be treated with
sodium hypochlorite. Solid waste should be handled carefully in
appropriate robust containers.
11. Laser safety: Most benchtop flow
cytometers use visible lasers which pose very little risk of injury
to the operator. Operators should be aware of the potential dangers
of lasers and the need for safety devices such as shields and
goggles in given circumstances. The operator is referred to the
manufacturer of the instrument and to AS 22111 with
regard to safety of lasers.
1. Universal precautions1
should be strictly observed when collecting patient samples.
2. Each specimen should be labelled
with the patient's name or a unique patient identifier, and date
and time of collection. If a preprinted label is used, the signature
or initials of the collector should appear on the label to verify
that the information relates to the patient from whom the blood
was collected.
3. Each specimen should be accompanied
by a test requisition which should include the patient name or
unique patient identifier, date, and time of collection, age,
sex, pertinent medication and presumptive diagnosis of the patient,
name of requesting physician, and address for return of results.
4. The request form and specimen tube(s)
should carry identical patient information. Both should be checked
on receipt in the laboratory; in case of discrepancy or doubt,
a clear, documented protocol approved by the Director/Scientist
in Charge of the laboratory should be followed. Unlabelled samples
and forms should be discarded.
5. A total white cell count and differential
should be performed at the laboratory initiating the request.
For distant laboratories and dispatch centres a white cell count
and unstained blood film should accompany each specimen.
6. EDTA anticoagulated blood and bone
marrow specimens are suitable if the specimen will be processed
within 8 hours of collection.
7. Heparin or ACD anticoagulated bBlood
and bone marrow specimens may be processed within 24 hours of
collection.
8. Tissue biopsies in isotonic medium
(such as phosphate buffered saline or RPMI) and CSF usually do
not require anticoagulant. These specimens should be processed
within 8 hours of collection.
1. Packaging, labelling, and transport
of specimens should comply with all current local, state, national,
and international regulations for the regions through which the
specimens will pass.
2. Specimens should be maintained at
18o 22o C in a light-proof container.
3. Temperatures below 10oC
or above 37oC must be avoided.
1. Visually inspect the specimen for
clots, haemolysis, or container defects. Re-collect the sample if
the specimen shows any visual signs of deterioration.
2. Specimens that are collected or transported
outside these guidelines should be treated with caution. The
viability of the cells should be tested and if <70% results
must be interpreted with caution and noted in the report.
1. Erythrocyte lysis methods are recommended
because they are less prone to differential losses of specific
subpopulations. However, using this procedure assumes that all
leucocyte subsets are equally tolerant to the lysis method used.
Several lysing techniques are available.
These include water, tris-buffered ammonium chloride, and hypotonic
buffer (4,5). Several proprietary lysing reagents are also available
from instrument and monoclonal antibody manufacturers. For
commercial reagents, the manufacturer's recommended protocol should
always be followed unless data are available confirming that any
modifications do not adversely affect results. If necessary, density
gradient isolation such as ficoll hypaque can be used.
2. Where possible a total leucocyte
count and differential should be performed before processing,
and the cell concentration adjusted accordingly. One should aim
for a cell number of 1x106 per test tube. Specimens
which are leucocyte-poor may have insufficient cells for flow
cytometric analysis, and require a larger sample collection volume.
Conversely, standard concentrations of antibody reagents
may be insufficient to saturate all binding sites in specimens
with leucocytosis, leading to possible false negative results.
3. Monoclonal antibody panels
Multicolour immunofluorescence is preferred,
although in some cases single-colour immunofluorescence may be
adequate. Because pattern recognition plays an important role
in leukaemia phenotyping, it is recommended that laboratories
devise panels for acute and chronic leukaemias and lymphomas.
The laboratories should then become familiar with the reactivity
patterns encountered with their particular reagents.
In addition to multicolour and scatter
analysis, pattern recognition may also include the fluorescence
intensity of antibody-labelled cells (as a measure of the level
of antigen expression). In the ideal situation, cells should be
labelled with excess antibody and instruments should be calibrated.
In order to increase the sensitivity of the analysis, the choice
of fluorochrome may be important. It is recommended that "brighter"
fluorochromes (such as phycoerythrin) be used in cases of expected
low antigen expression. Lower efficiency fluorochromes (e.g. FITC)
can be used for expected high antigen expression. The very high
efficiency "3rd colour" reagents (e.g. PECy5) cannot be
used for quantitative fluorescence intensity measurements, because
the antibody concentration is routinely reduced in order to bring
the fluorescence into a measurable range.
Although different antibodies can be
classified by cluster designation (CD) number, the different clones
may show different cellular reactivity. This may be important
when selecting an antibody panel. Both the CD number and the clone
should be listed on the worksheet.
For the determination of lineage and maturation stage, the detection of cytoplasmic antigens may be of importance.
Any panel of antibodies must include:
(a) Isotype controls appropriate for the antibodies in the panel.
(b) A suitable large panel of antibodies for investigating the presumptive diagnosis. The selection of antibodies used in the panel should be referenced.
(c) Mechanisms for internal cross checking
and lineage coexpression evaluation.
Examples of screening panels are:
Isotype controls
Non lineage CD45, CD34, HLADR
T cell CD2, CD3, CD7
B cell CD10, CD19, CD20
Myeloid / Mono CD13, CD14, CD15, CD33
Lymphoma / Chronic leukaemia
Isotype controls
Non lineage CD38, CD45, HLADR
T cell CD2, CD3, CD4, CD5, CD7, CD8
B cell CD10, CD19, CD20, CD22, CD23,
surface membrane immunoglobulin light chains (kappa, lambda)
Myeloid / Mono CD14 / CD15
4. Staining procedures
4.1 For commercially available antibodies,
follow the manufacturer's instructions. Any deviations from these
instructions should be verified by each individual laboratory.
The results of the altered procedure should be comparable to the
results obtained by the manufacturer's recommended procedure.
When no recommendations are available, antibodies can be titrated and tested on appropriate cells. Alternatively, antibodies may be used at 12mg per 1x106 cells.
NOTE:
Too low amounts of antibody per cell may result in weak staining,
leading to possible false negative results. Excess reagent may
cause increased nonspecific staining of negatives or reduced staining
of positives and may result in decrease of positive/negative resolution.
4.2 All washes and antibody incubations
should be performed in the presence of 0.1% NaN3 to
prevent shedding, capping, or internalisation of the antigen.
4.3 Generally the recommended incubation temperature and times are 4oC for 30 minutes OR room temperature for a minimum of 10 minutes.
CONTROLS FOR LEUKAEMIA AND LYMPHOMA
PHENOTYPING
1. Isotype controls are recognised as
an essential part of any monoclonal antibody panel for the purpose
of establishing levels of nonspecific binding and autofluorescence.
In many cases the isotype control may
not be optimal for determining nonspecific fluorescence
because of differences in fluorochrome / protein ratio and antibody
concentration between the isotype control and the test reagents.
This is particularly important in certain cases of leukaemia (in
particular myelomonocytic) where there is a high degree of species
cross-reactivity due to the presence of Fc receptors. At this
time there is no solution to this problem.
2. Pooled subclass controls are not
recommended. It is emphasised that dim reactivity of test antibodies
cannot be interpreted with certainty in the absence of appropriate
negative controls.
3. Even when appropriate negative controls
show no staining, a high level of false staining with antiimmunoglobulin
reagents may occur because these reagents bind to cytophilic serum
immunoglobulin adsorbed onto Fc receptors. Standard washing procedures
usually remove most of the serum and a proportion of cytophilic
immunoglobulin. The use of multicolour fluorescence based tests
utilising pan B cell antibodies in conjunction with light chain
may overcome this problem. Alternatively, cells can be incubated
at 37oC for 1 hour in serum-free medium, followed by
washing.
4. Ideally, a method control is prepared
and run on a daily basis in parallel with patient samples. At
a minimum the method control should be prepared and run whenever
a new batch of any reagent used in cell preparation and staining
is initiated.
FLOW CYTOMETER QUALITY CONTROL
These procedures should be carried out
when the flow cytometer is first received, or when major maintenance
or repair is performed.
1. Proper alignment of the optical components
of the flow cytometer (laser, focusing lenses, collecting lenses,
photodetectors, etc.) should be established using the manufacturer's
recommended alignment materials and procedures. Alignment particles
are typically uniform plastic particles incorporating a fluorescent
dye (other materials may be recommended by the manufacturer).
The laboratory must determine optimum settings for their own instrument
alignment particle combination and establish their own expected
values. The expected range along with relevant instrument settings
should be recorded in an instrument log book for subsequent use
and daily monitoring. (See Appendix 1, Optical Alignment Log
).
2. Verification of instrument sensitivity
and spectral overlap compensation settings should be determined
and recorded using cells or fluorescent microparticles.
2.1 Optical alignment can be verified by:
(1) Running alignment particles at instrument settings determined at the time of initial instrument set up.
(2) Recording the mean channel number and CV for all parameters that will be analysed for test specimens in the daily log book and/or on LevyJennings plots (Optical Alignment Log).
If particle values are not within acceptable
range, alignment should be optimised before proceeding.
2.2 Instrument sensitivity is verified by:
(2) If sensitivity particles (e.g. fluorochromelabelled beads or nuclei) are used, run them at testspecific settings established at the time of initial setup.
(3) Record mean fluorescence channel
and CV for all populations of interest (e.g. unstained versus
dimly stained) in the daily log book and/or on LevyJennings
plots (Sensitivity Log).
2.3 Two colour compensation is verified by:
(2) If compensation particles (e.g. FITC- and PElabelled beads) are used, run them at testspecific settings and compensation levels established at the time of initial instrument set-up. If particles values are not within acceptable range, compensation settings should be reevaluated using antibodystained leucocytes.
3) Record mean channel fluorescence
intensity for each population of interest (red only, green only,
and negative for both) in the daily log book and/or on LevyJennings
plots (Compensation Log).
Figure 1
Compensation of anti CD3-FITC and anti
CD19-PE labelled peripheral blood lymphocytes.
Note: Overcompensation leads to
fewer errors than undercompensation.
(2) Verifying acceptable light scatter
resolution of the leucocyte populations.
(3) Verifying that the percentage of
antibodypositive lymphocytes falls within established ranges
for the antigens selected.
If this positive control does not meet
laboratory criteria, remedial action should be taken. Instrument
performance and/or staining procedure should be checked to determine
the source of the problem. Any problems identified using this
sample must be rectified prior to analysis of test specimens.
1. Sample order. Run all control specimens
first and then, according to laboratory priority,
run the patient samples.
2. Test order within any panel. The
first tube should be a gating control to maximise the cells of
interest and minimise contamination with irrelevant particles.
That is, the discriminator is set to exclude debris, platelets, etc.
(see Figure 2). The appropriate isotype controls should be
run next, followed by the test panel to investigate the provisional
diagnosis.
Figure 2
Common ways of displaying forward versus
90o light scatter observed for lysed whole blood preparations.
(L=predominantly lymphocytes, M= predominantly monocytes, P= predominantly
polymorphonuclear leucocytes). Live gating should be restricted
to the setting of a forward light scatter threshold. Set leucocyte
gates as broadly as possible, consistent with acceptable levels
of contaminating particles to avoid the exclusion of cells
of interest .
3. Assessment of specimen viability
is desirable. However, because of biohazard concerns, it is recommended
that all samples be appropriately fixed prior to analysis on the
flow cytometer. It is not presently possible, on a routine
large-scale basis, to distinguish those cells which were nonviable
prior to fixation. However, this can be performed using ethidium
monoazide (EMA) as described by K. Muirhead, 2nd AFCG Methods Course,
1989.
4. A minimum of 10,000 events per sample
should be collected to allow for accurate assessment of minor
cell populations. When the cells of interest are present in low
frequencies, the total events collected should be increased proportionally.
5. It is recommended that correlated
analysis be performed on all samples to enhance the differentiation
between normal and abnormal cell populations. That is, two or
more parameters are collected per cell. This can either be multicolour
immunofluorescence or a combination of light scatter (forward
or 90o) and a fluorescence parameter.
6. Multiple window analysis can be performed
when obvious cell populations can be discriminated by light scatter
or antigen expression. However, this should be performed in conjunction
with the entire population under study since it is recognised
that normal elements within a population provide excellent antibody
controls.
7. The reporting of percentages is not
recommended for leukaemia samples due to the difficulties encountered
with the expression of many antigens. Reference to percentage
positivity in normal tissues such as bone marrow or peripheral
blood has little relevance to leukaemic samples. Instead an estimate
of the strength of expression of the antigens on a detected abnormal
population should be made. This should be reported as "dim"
or "weak" expression where there is some overlap with
the appropriate negative control. The report can then be in the
form of a qualitative description of the phenotype of the leukaemia
cells.
8. It is beyond the scope of these guidelines
to present a detailed analysis of different leukaemias because of
the wide range of immunophenotypes that can be encountered. It
is recommended to obtain familiarisation with the expression of
antigens on normal cells and to use reliable reference sources
such as "Report of the International Leukocyte Antigen
Workshop".
1. The possibility of patients' contesting
the diagnostic implications derived in part from flow cytometric
testing makes it incumbent upon the laboratory to be able to demonstrate
and verify the process used in arriving at the reported test results.
2. Where possible all listmode data
on all samples analysed should be retained. At a minimum, retain correlated dual
fluorescence data for each test and any interpretive comments
on samples where a significant diagnosis is made.
3. Retain all primary files, worksheets,and report forms. This should also include the source, specification
sheet, expiry date, etc., and the cluster designation (CD) as
well as the clone number of the antibodies used.
4. Minimum duration of data storage
depends on state and federal regulations. These regulations may
vary and each laboratory will need to remain informed of the current
requirements.
1. Report all unique patient identifiers.
2. Report all data in terms of cluster
designation (CD) with a short description of the main antigen
recognition characteristics.
3. For unclustered antibodies, report
the clone name with a short description of the main antigen recognition
characteristics.
4. Report all data indicating the phenotype
of the detected abnormal population. If necessary,e.g. in the
case of detection of minimal residual disease, make an estimation
of the percentage of abnormal cells in the total cell population.
1. Where possible, the laboratory should
belong to and participate in a recognised external Quality Assurance
program.
2. Each laboratory should determine
the quality of the reagents on a regular basis and at least when
changing to new lot numbers. Antibodies should be tested on appropriate
cell lines and freshly prepared leucocytes to determine whether
they can be used to measure the level of antigen expression.
1. Universal precautions:
There appears to be no single document
that addresses the specific needs of flow cytometry. Readers are
advised to refer to the following documents:
(i) Australian Standard AS2211 - 1991,
Laser safety.
(ii) Australian Standard AS 2243.3
1995, Safety in laboratories, Part 3: Microbiology.
(iii) National Committee for Clinical
Laboratory Standards M29T, Protection of laboratory workers
from infectious disease transmitted by blood, body fluids and
tissue.
(iv) Morbidity Mortality Weekly Report
1988;37(24):37782, 3878. CDC Update: Universal precautions
for the prevention of transmission of human immunodeficiency virus,
hepatitis B virus, and other bloodborne pathogens in health care
settings
2. National Committee for Clinical Laboratory
Standards. Vol 12 No. 6. Quality Assurance and Immunophenotyping
of Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes.
3. Muirhead, K.A., Wallace, P.K.,Schmitt,
T.C., Rescatore, R.L., Ranco, J.A., Horan, P.K. Methodological
considerations for implementation of lymphocyte subset analysis
in a clinical reference laboratory. In Clinical Cytometry.
M. Andreeff, ed. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. Vol. 468, pp 113127,
The New York Academy of Sciences, New York, N.Y., 1986.
4. Loken, M. R., Meiners, H., Terstappen,
LW. M. Comparison of sample preparation techniques for flow cytometric
analysis of immunofluorescence. Cytometry Supplement 2
: 53, 1988.
(A) (B)
A) Uncompensated. (B) Correctly compensated.
2.4 Overall system performance can be
verified by:
(1) Running a "normal" specimen
stained with an antibody reagent such as anti CD3-FITC and
CD4-PE at testspecific instrument settings.
CD-ROM Vol 3 was produced by Monica M. Shively and other staff at the Purdue University Cytometry Laboratories and distributed free of charge as an educational service to the cytometry community. If you have any comments please direct them to Dr. J. Paul Robinson, Professor & Director, PUCL, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907. Phone:(765) 494-0757; FAX (765) 494-0517; Web http://www.cyto.purdue.edu, EMAIL cdrom3@flowcyt.cyto.purdue.edu