Abstract
Flourescence-based multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC) combined with multispectral imaging and digital image analysis (DIA) is a quantitative high-resolution method for determination of protein expression in tissue. We applied this method for five biomarkers (CDX2, SOX2, SOX9, E-cadherin, and β-catenin) using tissue microarrays of a Norwegian unselected series of primary colorectal cancer. The data were compared with previously obtained chromogenic IHC data of the same tissue cores, visually assessed by the Allred method. We found comparable results between the methods, although confirmed that DIA offered improved resolution to differentiate cases with high and low protein expression. However, we experienced inherent challenges with digital image analysis of membrane staining, which was better assessed visually. DIA and mIHC enabled quantitative analysis of biomarker coexpression on the same tissue section at the single-cell level, revealing a strong negative correlation between the differentiation markers CDX2 and SOX2. Both methods confirmed known prognostic associations for CDX2, but DIA improved data visualization and detection of clinicopathological and biological associations. In summary, mIHC combined with DIA is an efficient and reliable method to evaluate protein expression in tissue, here shown to recapitulate and improve detection of known clinicopathological and survival associations for the emerging biomarker CDX2, and is therefore a candidate approach to standardize CDX2 detection in pathology laboratories.
Introduction
Protein expression of biomarkers in cancer tissue is routinely assessed by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and relies on visual and semiquantitative evaluation of staining patterns and intensity. IHC is easy to perform and does not require advanced or expensive equipment, making it accessible to almost every laboratory. The study of biomarkers in large patient series was greatly facilitated by the development of the tissue microarray (TMA) technology [1, 2]. However, for the majority of biomarkers there are no standard criteria used for the manual scoring and subsequent semiquantitative analysis of protein expression, making characterization at different subcellular locations a subjective and potentially complex task [3]. The Allred score [4], which summarizes the intensity and the extent of staining, and the H-score which multiplies them [5] are two widely used methods. Consequently, patients are divided into different subgroups depending on which scoring system is used and the results are therefore not directly comparable. Furthermore, technical variations in antibody concentration and detection systems have a major impact on the intensity of staining, particularly when using chromogenic IHC, which has a very limited linear dynamic signal range, with significant consequences for downstream analyses [6]. Moreover, for high-throughput studies and when single-cell analysis is relevant, visual scoring of chromogenic IHC is time consuming and, in most cases, not feasible [7].
An alternative method that can address many of these problems is fluorescence-based multiplex IHC (mIHC) combined with multispectral imaging and digital image analysis (DIA). mIHC is based on the interrogation of multiple antigens on the same tissue section and multispectral imaging enables unmixing of several different fluorescent spectra, including tissue autofluorescence [8, 9]. The signal obtained by fluorescent detection has a much larger linear dynamic range than chromogenic detection, providing the basis for a more precise and objective quantification of protein expression [6, 10, 11].
In this study, we aimed to identify benefits and drawbacks with DIA and mIHC in comparison with conventional IHC analyzed according to the Allred method for colorectal cancer research and clinical use, with a particular focus on the clinically relevant markers CDX2 and SOX2. We performed DIA of fluorescence-based mIHC stains of CDX2, SOX2, SOX9, E-cadherin, and β-catenin in colorectal cancer samples arranged in TMAs, and compared with previous visually scored chromogenic IHC stains of the same series [12, 13]. All five markers are related to tumor differentiation and tumor stemness, and expected to be largely expressed in both normal mucosa (except for SOX2) and in epithelial cancer cells of the colorectum, and only infrequently in stromal cells; CDX2, SOX2, and SOX9 staining were expected to localize to the nucleus and to some degree also to the cytoplasm, E-cadherin was expected to localize to the membrane and the cytoplasm, and β-catenin should frequently be expressed in all three cellular compartments (proteinatlas.org). Finally, we compared clinicopathological associations obtained by the two methods focusing on the prognostic assessment of CDX2 and its inverse correlation with SOX2.
Materials and methods
Patient samples
During a 10-year period (1993–2003) 1290 patients were diagnosed with primary colorectal cancer at Oslo University Hospital—Aker hospital site (Norway), of whom 927 underwent major resection and tumor samples were included on a TMA (one 0.6 mm tissue core from central tumor per patient) distributed on four receiver blocks, as described previously [12]. Aker hospital served a geographically defined catchment area with a population of about 270,000 inhabitants in this period and the cohort is population representative for the Oslo area. Relevant clinical data was collected prospectively, analyzed retrospectively, and recorded in a local database which was quality controlled at follow-ups. Our data was cross-checked with the Cancer Registry of Norway which records data on all patients diagnosed with CRC. Microsatellite instability (MSI) status was determined using the consensus markers suggested by the National Cancer Institute, as described previously [14] (Table 1).
This study was endorsed by the Norwegian Data Protection Authority and the Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics, South-Eastern Norway (REK number 1.2005.1629). We obtained informed consent from all patients prior to enrollment and the research biobanks were constructed according to national legislation. The research was performed according to the Declaration of Helsinki.
Immunohistochemistry
IHC assays were performed on 4 µm thick sections, using monoclonal antibodies, except for SOX9 (polyclonal).
The chromogenic stains were previously performed and visually evaluated according to the Allred method for β-catenin, E-cadherin, and SOX9 [12] and for CDX2 [13]. SOX2 staining was performed using the same protocol as for CDX2 (not previously published). Allred scores (ranging from 0 to 8) were calculated for each evaluable case and relevant cellular compartment by adding the estimated proportion of positive cells (score value ranging from 0 to 5; 0 = none, 1 ≤ 1%, 2 = 1–10%, 3 = 11–33%, 4 = 34–66%, and 5 = 67–100%) and the estimated intensity of staining (score value ranging from 0 to 3; 0 = negative, 1 = weak, 2 = intermediate, and 3 = strong) (Fig. S1). The fluorescent stains were performed on the last sections of the same TMA blocks and subsequent analyses included only two of the total four TMA blocks since the other two were exhausted. Cases with poor tumor preservation, loss of tissue, insufficient number of epithelial cells (typically <50), extensive tissue folding, or necrosis were excluded from the analyses. The number of evaluable and overlapping cases for each stain can be found in Table 2. Only overlapping cases with evaluable staining were used for comparative analyses.
Indirect detection by fluorescence was based on the OpalTM Multiplex IHC method (PerkinElmer/Akoya, USA), and performed on the Autostainer Link 48 system (Agilent/Dako, Denmark) with a PT link module to standardize the staining process. Deparaffinization, antigen retrieval, and antibody stripping were carried out for 20 min at 97 °C using the EnVision™ FLEX Target Retrieval Solution (3-in-1) pH 9 (Agilent/Dako), in 65 °C preheat mode. Subsequent staining was performed using the OpalTM 4-Color Manual IHC Kit (PerkinElmer/Akoya, USA) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. Signal amplification and covalent binding of fluorophore was achieved by using a tyramide signaling amplification reagent (included in the Opal kit) that is conjugated with a different fluorophore for each cycle [8]. Each fluorescent stain performed included markers for epithelial tissue and DAPI (described further below). Thus, in a 3-plex stain there is room for analysis of one biomarker, in a 4-plex there is room for two, and in a 5-plex there is room for three. A total of three 3-plex stains (for analysis of SOX9, β-catenin, and E-cadherin), one 4-plex stain (for analysis of CDX2 and SOX2), and one 5-plex stain (for analysis of CDX2 and two unpublished markers) were performed in the study (see also Table 2 for a list of all stains and Table S1 for an overview of the staining procedure for each multiplex stain and included biomarkers). Tissue samples were incubated for 30 min with the following primary antibodies: CDX2 (1:50, clone 88, Abcam, UK; detected by Opal 520 at 1:100), SOX2 (1:25, clone SP76, Cell Marque/Sigma-Aldrich, Germany; detected by Opal 570 at 1:100), SOX9 (1:500, Sigma-Aldrich; detected by Opal 570 at 1:100), E-cadherin (1:16000, clone 36, Becton Dickinson, USA; detected by Opal 570 at 1:100), and β-catenin (1:3000, clone 14, Becton Dickinson; detected by Opal 570 at 1:100). In the last cycle of antibody staining, the tissue was hybridized with a cocktail of epithelial markers to allow for complete and accurate epithelial segmentation by the DIA algorithm (anti-pan Cytokeratin (1:1500, clone C-11, Abcam) and anti-pan Cytokeratin Type I/II (1:1000, clone AE1/AE3, Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA); these were detected by Opal 670 at 1:100. For the 4- and 5-plex stains, anti-E-cadherin (1:16000, Clone 36, Becton Dickinson) was included in the epithelial antibody cocktail. Counterstaining was performed using DAPI (PerkinElmer/Akoya) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Finally, the slides were mounted using ProLong Diamond Antifade Mountant (Invitrogen/Thermo Fisher Scientific). A separate single-plex stain was performed for each fluorophore to create spectral libraries for unmixing of individual spectral signatures in the multiplex. In addition, one slide was not probed with any fluorophore, thus providing the spectral signature of the tissue autofluorescence. The chosen concentration of antibodies was based on optimizing the staining specificity, signal intensity, and signal-to-noise level for both chromogenic DAB and fluorescence staining among control tissues embedded on a separate test TMA, including 42 primary colorectal cancer cases and six samples from normal colon mucosa (Fig. S2). Fluorescence signal intensities for all markers were balanced and kept within the recommended signal range for optimal spectral unmixing of fluorophores with the Vectra 3 system, at between 0 to about 30 counts with the UV lamp power set to 10%. In addition, a negative control experiment where the primary antibody was omitted was performed. To confirm that antibodies were properly stripped away or denatured between cycles [15], the following control experiment was performed for each antibody: after deparaffinization/antigen retrieval, sections were probed with the antibody and stained with its paired fluorophore. This was then followed by heat-treatment in the PT-link. A new round of staining was then performed, however, this time omitting any primary antibody and applying a different fluorophore after secondary antibody incubation. The tissue was imaged and analyzed to confirm that there was no signal above noise originating from the second fluorophore applied. Uniformity of staining was assessed visually and by scatterplots and Spearman’s correlation coefficients assessing the association between protein expression and sample age (Fig. S3).
Fluorescence-based detection of CDX2 was performed for two separate cocktails, one 4-plex with SOX2, and one 5-plex with two other markers on sections from a replicate TMA where samples from all blocks were available. Hence, the number of available cases for evaluation of CDX2 expression was much higher and facilitated comparison of prognostic value between the Allred method and DIA. 5-plex staining for CDX2 and other markers (data not shown) was performed manually using the OpalTM 5-color Manual IHC Kit (PerkinElmer/Akoya) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations, except for deparaffinization, antigen retrieval and antibody stripping steps being performed in the PT link module, as described previously.
Image acquisition and digital image analysis
Multispectral images were acquired at ×20 magnification using the Vectra 3.0 Automated Quantitative Pathology Imaging System, 200 slides (Vectra software version 3, PerkinElmer/Akoya). Standard settings were used for multispectral image acquisition.
Multispectral image analysis of multiplex IHC stains was performed using inForm Image Analysis Software (version 2.3, PerkinElmer/Akoya). A representative set of training images were first loaded and spectrally unmixed by using spectral libraries generated from the library stains for each fluorophore and the autofluorescence slide. Next, a machine learning algorithm was trained by user-specified tissue annotations aided by the signal from the epithelial markers to accurately segment tumor tissue versus stromal tissue and background, as well as individual cells using the nuclear DAPI signal. Optimization of the membrane segmentation algorithm for β-catenin and E-cadherin analysis was aided by the signal from the pan-cytokeratin staining. All images were reviewed after batch processing; normal glands, necrotic tissue, tissue folds, and other technical artefacts were excluded from further image analyses (Fig. S4). Protein expression was calculated in segmented tumor tissue as the mean signal intensity within the respective cellular compartment.
Statistics
All statistical analyses were performed using RStudio version 1.1.463 (R version 3.3.2). Five-year overall survival plots with risk tables were generated according to the Kaplan–Meier method using the Survminer package (version 0.4.3). Survival curves were compared using the log rank test, and hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were estimated using univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazards models. The overall survival time was defined from surgery to death from any cause. Follow-up was complete in the study period. Scatterplots were generated with the ggscatter function in the ggpubr package (version 0.1.6) using the Spearman method to calculate correlation coefficients and P values. Density distribution plots were generated using the ggdensity function in the ggpubr package (version 0.1.6). All P values were two-sided and derived from statistical tests with a significance level at 0.05.
Results
Reasonable concordance between visual and digital scoring, but digital analysis of membrane staining is challenging
The protein expression levels and patterns of CDX2, SOX2, SOX9, E-cadherin, and β-catenin were evaluated visually by singleplex chromogenic-based (DAB) IHC and by fluorescence-based mIHC. Both staining methods showed that all markers were expressed predominantly in epithelial cells (all but SOX2 were also expressed both in the normal mucosa and the cancer cells); CDX2, SOX2, and SOX9 were expressed predominantly in the cell nuclei, whereas E-cadherin was expressed in the cell membrane and cytoplasm, and β-catenin was expressed in all cellular compartments (Fig. 1).
The chromogenic stains were scored visually within the epithelial compartment with discrete values from 0 to 8, while the fluorescent stains were scored digitally on a continuous scale within the epithelial compartment. The distributions of nuclear and cytoplasmic scores were similar between the two methods (Fig. 1, middle) and they showed a reasonable concordance considering the inherent differences in scoring methodology (Spearman’s rho test, correlation coefficients (r) from 0.45 to 0.72; Fig. 2), but analysis of membrane staining showed a poor concordance (Spearman’s rho test, r = 0.095 for β-catenin and r = 0.39 for E-cadherin, Fig. S5). This can in part be explained by challenges with the membrane segmentation algorithm (Fig. 3a–d). Hence, further comparisons for analysis of membrane staining were not performed.
Fluorescence-based IHC combined with DIA captures variation in protein expression within Allred scoring groups and improves differentiation among cases
In general, we observed a large variation in protein expression scores from the fluorescently labeled and digitally analyzed samples within the Allred scoring groups. To illustrate this variation we selected three samples that were scored into the highest Allred category (Allred = 8) for CDX2 expression, but which had large differences in rank (and absolute score) when analyzed by fluorescence and DIA. The distribution of Allred scores were somewhat shifted toward the higher values as compared with the DIA scores (Figs. 1, 2). We also observed that minor differences between samples stained with DAB could translate to much larger differences when the samples were stained with fluorescent probes (Fig. 4a–c). DIA analysis at the single cell level classifying CDX2 protein expression into ten bins showed that the protein expression differed substantially between these cases, although this was not evident by DAB-staining and visual analysis. DIA accurately quantified the fluorescence signal from each individual cell and calculated the average signal per case and was thus able to objectively measure the average protein expression also in samples with heterogeneous staining patterns (Fig. 4d), which are difficult to assess by visual analysis.
Multiplex IHC combined with DIA improves detection of histopathological and biological relationships
By analyzing both serial stains and the multiplex staining of CDX2 and SOX2 we confirmed their inverse relationship in colorectal cancer [16]; however, the inverse correlation was considerably stronger for DIA (Spearman’s rho test, Allred r = −0.16; DIA r = −0.51; n = 357; Fig. 5a). Furthermore, the DIA method also detected a stronger association between loss of CDX2 and MSI, and this result could be effectively visualized by the denser distribution of MSI tumors with low CDX2-expression (Spearman’s rho test, Allred r = 0.26, DIA r = 0.31; n = 343, Fig. 5a). Similarly, the correlation between SOX2 and MSI was stronger for DIA as well (Spearman’s rho test, Allred r = 0.088, DIA r = 0.26; n = 341, Fig. 5a). The correlation between loss of CDX2 and a low differentiation grade was similar for the two methods (Spearman’s rho test, Allred r = 0.22; DIA r = 0.18; n = 349). Overall, the correlations among markers and with clinicopathological variables were stronger for the digital analysis as compared with the visual analysis (Fig. S6). Continuous data, having a higher resolution, are particularly suited to visualize these biological relationships, as illustrated in Fig. 5b. We performed single-cell analysis of CDX2/SOX2 colocalization for the multiplex staining and found a similarly strong inverse relationship between the two markers (Fig. 5c). Interestingly, a small subset of the tumors showed a nearly mutually exclusive expression on the single cell-level (Fig. 5d).
DIA recapitulates prognostic associations for the CDX2 biomarker
To evaluate potential differences in predictive performance, the two analytical approaches were compared with respect to their ability to detect well known prognostic relationships for the biomarker CDX2 [13, 17, 18]. A predetermined cutoff for CDX2-positivity at the 11th percentile was used to reduce confirmation bias and was originally set near the inflection point for the bimodal distribution using the Binarization Across multiple SCales algorithm [13]. We confirmed that the fluorescence-based CDX2 protein expression data showed a similar bimodal distribution (Fig. 1b). Kaplan–Meier analysis of 5-year overall survival showed that DIA confirmed the association between a low CDX2 expression and a poor prognosis (Allred: HR 1.27, 95% CI 0.89–1.83, P = 0.19; DIA: HR 1.43, CI 1.02–2.01, P = 0.039; n = 589; Fig. 6; patient characteristics Table 1), as well as recapitulating the strong prognostic value of CDX2 in stage IV colorectal cancer (Fig. S7) [13]. Results were also similar in multivariable analyses including the covariates age, gender, tumor stage, MSI, and differentiation grade (Allred: HR 1.54, 95% CI 1.01–2.38, P = 0.047; DIA: HR 1.81, 95% CI 1.17–2.80, P = 0.0072; n = 530).
Discussion
Overall a good correlation between visual and digital biomarker analyses
Our study supports fluorescence-based mIHC combined with DIA using machine learning as a good method to quantify biomarker expression. We obtained reasonable correlations for nuclear and cytoplasmic staining when comparing chromogenic singleplex IHC with fluorescent mIHC results for five known colorectal cancer markers (CDX2, SOX2, SOX9, E-cadherin, and β-catenin), considering that the scoring methodologies are inherently different and that the tissue sections used to compare these methodologies were not neighboring sections in the TMA. Similar correlations between the two scoring methods have been reported for several cancer types [19,20,21,22,23,24,25].
The nature of the staining and scoring methods explains inconsistencies
Nonetheless, scores from one method are not directly translatable to the other. These differences between methods can in part be attributed to technical issues. First, the fact that the tissue sections used for chromogenic and fluorescent staining were not adjacent reduces the accuracy of the comparison between the methods. Also, loss of tissue, detachment during processing, and staining of “exhausted” paraffin blocks limited the comparisons. For downstream survival analyses with respect to the biomarker CDX2 we stained a replicate TMA set to increase the number of samples analyzed by fluorescence. Even though the samples stained by DAB and fluorescence were from different areas of the same donor block, the survival analyses remained highly similar. Further, it is important to keep in mind the inherent differences between DAB-based visual (Allred) scoring and fluorescence-based digital analyses. Inconsistencies between data obtained with the two scoring approaches are partly due to DIA being a more quantitative method that yields continuous values, while visual assessment according to the Allred score produces discrete values on a nonlinear and discontinuous scale from 0 to 8. For example, the Allred scores 4, 5, and 6 can be ambiguous since different staining patterns can underlie these scores, typically biasing the evaluation of results toward high scores and masking variability within tumor samples. Here, DIA offers a simpler and more objective approach to accurately measure the protein expression in the tissue. Saturation of DAB signal leading to compression and right-shifting of the data distribution is an additional likely explanation for some of the observed discrepancies with DIA scores.
Of note, the ‘optimal’ scoring approach may vary from biomarker to biomarker. Some proteins may exert their strongest influence on biology by number, with increasing amounts of protein being related to some cellular or tumor phenotype. Other biomarkers may be better described by the number of cells expressing the protein. The Allred score is based on categorization of each of these parameters prior to summation, while the scores provided through the current DIA algorithm are intrinsically based on both of these measures by analyzing the mean score across all tumor cells. This scoring method for direct comparison of DIA with Allred was chosen as it does not require any definition of threshold for biomarker positivity and is thus robust. However, with the cell-by-cell data obtained through DIA, more complex scoring schemes are straightforward to develop. For instance, cells can readily be categorized based on expression levels and analyzed for colocalization with other markers, as illustrated for CDX2 and SOX2.
Furthermore, visual scoring is performed with dichotomization in mind, meaning that uncertain “strong” or “weak” cases are typically given a score closer to the middle (classified as “moderate”), to keep the “strong” and “weak” categories robust. Importantly, chromogenic detection has a narrow linear dynamic range [6] and reaches saturation fast, thus being prone to compressing “moderate” and “strong” signals as compared with fluorescence-based detection. Accordingly, fluorescence-based IHC provides the basis for more accurate quantification of protein expression for cases at the high end of the spectrum, particularly for proteins with a large expression range.
Scoring of membrane staining: a challenge for the digital analysis
Evaluation of membrane staining is relevant for many clinically important biomarkers, such as β-catenin, E-cadherin, and HER2. Unfortunately, the digital scoring of membrane staining correlated poorly with the visual analysis, which was better at discerning cytoplasmic and nuclear staining from specific membrane staining. This observation might have several explanations, including inherent limitations of the machine learning algorithm to segment cell–cell borders consistently across cases with different morphologies and technical issues, despite thorough optimization of segmentation parameters. Also, the specificity of the marker used for guiding the membrane segmentation, inherent limitations set by image resolution, various physical characteristics of the tissue sections where individual cells/nuclei, and membranes are often not distinguishable, as well as general difficulties in differentiating between diffuse cytoplasmic staining and specific membrane staining at cell–cell borders, are other important factors that can explain the discrepancy between the scoring methods. The staining pattern of the biomarker is inherently important for how well the methods compare; β-catenin, due to its potential presence in any cellular compartment is more sensitive to inaccuracies in compartment-based scoring, when compared with scoring of a biomarker that is more or less exclusively found in one cellular compartment. That said, it is possible that a more specific membrane marker and alternative software packages and machine learning tools could mitigate some of these limitations.
Digital analysis facilitates biomarker combination assessments and confirms the prognostic value of CDX2
We found a strong inverse relationship between the expression levels of CDX2 and SOX2 in colorectal cancer, confirming a previous study by Lundberg et al. [16]. This correlation is well documented in the gastric setting, namely in intestinal metaplasia [26,27,28]. We also confirmed previous observations showing that low CDX2 expression is associated with the MSI phenotype [13, 18]. We further observed that tumors with low CDX2 expression typically have high SOX2 expression and are poorly differentiated, and demonstrated that identification and visualization of these clinicopathological and biological relationships can be substantially improved by the higher and linear data resolution obtained with a multiplex fluorescence-based IHC approach combined with DIA, as well as by the ability to perform serial stains on the same tissue section. The value of fluorescence-based mIHC combined with DIA technology for colocalization analyses [29] has been well demonstrated in immunoprofiling studies [9, 19, 30,31,32], and we illustrate the feasibility of such analyses also for assessing the relationship between important tumor differentiation markers such as CDX2 and SOX2.
We also show that mIHC combined with DIA is an efficient approach to assess the prognostic value of CDX2 protein expression, highlighting the potential clinical utility of this technology to assess nuclear and cytoplasmic markers in a more standardized fashion, in line with results in esophageal cancer [33], breast cancer [34], and colorectal cancer [35]. The Wistuba lab recently reviewed multiplex staining and DIA platforms, concluding with their utility and advantages for translational research and clinical applications [36], and a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of biomarker modalities for predicting response to PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint blockade concluded that mIHC has improved diagnostic performance as compared with conventional PD-L1 IHC, tumor mutational burden, and gene expression profiling [37].
Conclusions
In conclusion, fluorescence-based mIHC combined with DIA is a reliable and efficient method to quantify biomarker protein expression in TMAs and to detect clinicopathological and biological relationships, although robust analysis of membrane staining remains a challenge. Our results advocate the use of mIHC and DIA for research and clinical applications, here successfully shown for the colorectal cancer biomarker CDX2.
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Acknowledgements
The research leading to these results has received funding from the Research Council of Norway, in cooperation with the University of Oslo, through the ‘Toppforsk’ grant (Project Number 250993/F20), the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7-PEOPLE-2013-COFUND) under grant agreement no: 609020—Scientia Fellows (supporting NL post doc fellowship), the South‐Eastern Health Regional Authorities of Norway (Project Number 2016123, supporting CHB PhD fellowship), the Norwegian Cancer Society (Grant No: 182759-2016). This study was also supported by FEDER—Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional funds through the COMPETE 2020—Operational Program for Competitiveness and Internationalization (POCI), Portugal 2020, and by Portuguese funds through FCT—Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia/Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação in the framework of the project “Institute for Research and Innovation in Health Sciences” (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007274), NORTE-07-0124-FEDER-000029 supported by Norte Portugal Regional Program (NORTE 2020), under the PORTUGAL 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and POCI-01-0145-FEDER-29503.
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Lopes, N., Bergsland, C.H., Bjørnslett, M. et al. Digital image analysis of multiplex fluorescence IHC in colorectal cancer recognizes the prognostic value of CDX2 and its negative correlation with SOX2. Lab Invest 100, 120–134 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41374-019-0336-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41374-019-0336-4