Background: Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining is widely considered to be the gold-standard diagnostic tool for histopathology evaluation. However, the fatty nature of some tissue types, such as breast tissue, presents challenges with cryo-sectioning, often resulting in artifacts that can make histopathologic interpretation and correlation with other imaging modalities virtually impossible. We present an optimized on-block H&E staining technique that improves contrast for identifying collagenous stroma during cryo-fluorescence tomography (CFT) sectioning.
Approach: In this prospective study, we embedded four breast specimens with confirmed ligaments from a bilateral mastopexy in an optimal cutting temperature block. Two of the samples were processed on a CFT imager and stained with our on-block staining protocol. In this protocol, hematoxylin was applied to the block face before being washed with deionized water. Eosin was then applied and washed with 95% ethanol. We then applied mounting medium and acquired images with a stereo-dissecting microscope and camera. Prior to staining, GFP fluorescence and white-light images were acquired with the CFT system to serve as a validation metric. The other two samples were sectioned on a standard cryostat and stained according to gold-standard H&E protocol. The resulting microscope slides were imaged with a digital slide scanner and viewed with Leica Imagescope software. An experienced pathologist evaluated both sets of images for qualitative comparisons.
Results: Pathologist evaluation confirmed that striations from on-block staining were qualitatively comparable with collagen tracks identified in gold-standard histology images. Furthermore, GFP images captured collagen autofluorescence, which aligned with the same structures identified by our on-block staining protocol.
Conclusion: Our on-block staining technique shows comparable visualization of collagenous structures at the mesoscopic level for fresh breast tissue samples. This technique improves tissue contrast and region of interest selection for histology during CFT imaging for analysis of the stromal architecture of the breast.