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      BRIEF REPORT | 
Correspondence to: R.S.D. Brown, Dept. of Radiotherapy, St Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield, London EC1A 7BE, UK. E-mail: richard.brown@ucl.ac.uk
| Summary | 
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Production of paraffin-section material from tissue samples that contain bone requires decalcification. Techniques such as acidic decalcification or EDTA chelation are suitable methods. Acid decalcification is generally quicker than EDTA chelation but studies have suggested that it may result in hydrolysis of DNA. Here we show that limited acid decalcification (less than 24 hr) in 5% formic acid can preserve DNA sufficient for fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) or comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) and that prolonged 10% formic acid decalcification results in failure of FISH and only limited retrieval of DNA for CGH studies. (J Histochem Cytochem 50:113–115, 2002)
Key Words: bone marrow, comparative genomic, hybridization (CGH), decalcification, DNA, formic acid, fluorescent in situ hybridization, (FISH)
| Introduction | 
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Routine acid decalcification (RDO; Apex Engineering Products, 
Plainfield, IL) for bone marrow trephine and autopsy bone samples 
has been reported to result in failure to obtain DNA for in 
situ hybridization (ISH), comparative genomic hybridization 
(CGH), and flow cytometric studies in trephine and autopsy bone 
marrow samples from prostate cancer (![]()
We also routinely use acid decalcification for bone marrow trephine 
specimens (12–18 hr) but use a 5% formic acid (Becton Dickinson 
Laboratory Supplies; Mountain View, CA) solution in distilled water 
rather than a hydrochloric acid-based product (RDO). This method of 
decalcification has enabled us to successfully perform FISH on 15 of 
15 samples analyzed for androgen receptor (AR) gene copy number in 
bone metastases from prostate cancer (SpectrumOrange AR FISH probe, 
SpectrumGreen centromere FISH probe for the X chromosome; Vysis, 
Downers Grove, IL) (see Fig 1A). AR gene 
amplification has been implicated in the development of 
hormone-refractory prostate cancer (HRPC), being found in 
approximately 30% of locally recurrent hormone-refractory biopsies 
and rarely in hormone-naïve specimens (![]()
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The FISH studies on decalcified trephine material required an additional pretreatment, i.e., microwave antigen retrieval technique, before standard tissue digestion with pepsin (M. Farquharson, Department of Pathology, Glasgow Royal Infirmary; personal communication).
Formic acid decalcification has also enabled us to successfully hybridize extracted tumor DNA from decalcified bone marrow trephines to normal metaphase chromosomes in five cases studied thus far (Fig 2) for CGH. Degenerate oligionucleotide primer (5'-CGACTCGAGNNNNNNATGTGG-3') polymerase chain reaction (DOP-PCR) products of up to 1500 base pairs in length have been generated from all 15 decalcified trephine samples (Fig 3).
      
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For larger autopsy bone marrow specimens, we use a 10% formic acid 
solution for decalcification over a 7–10-day period (with 
replenishment of the solution on one to two occasions during this 
period). Similarly to ![]()
Little published information is available on the effects of formic 
acid decalcification on DNA degradation. We have been unable to find 
other reports of successful studies using FISH or CGH on formic 
acid-decalcified bone marrow trephine biopsies (Medline Search 
1966–2001). ![]()
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We conclude that routine acid decalcification with 5% formic acid can satisfactorily preserve DNA for some types of molecular biological studies (FISH and CGH) on prostate cancer bone metastases taken by trephine biopsy. Longer and stronger acid decalcification resulted in unsuccessful FISH in all autopsy specimens, whereas non-calcified material from the same postmortem samples worked satisfactorily. Decalcification using EDTA appears to offer the best chance of successful DNA retrieval from bone tissue and appears to be the method of choice for decalcification in a prospective study of bone marrow trephine and autopsy samples. Five percent formic acid decalcification avoids major acid hydrolysis of DNA, as judged by our results with FISH and CGH studies on decalcified trephine material. Attempts to use techniques such as FISH and CGH on archival material should not automatically be abandoned if retrospectively collected specimens have been decalcified in formic acid.
Received for publication June 27, 2001; accepted September 5, 2001. 
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