histologydependent
Histologydependent refers to a class of biological or clinical phenomena whose characteristics are contingent upon the histological context of the tissue involved. The concept arose in the early 2010s as investigators recognized that many cellular responses, including gene expression patterns, protein phosphorylation, and therapeutic sensitivity, differed markedly between histological subtypes of the same organ system. For example, breast cancers classified as triple‑negative or hormone‑receptor positive exhibit distinct histopathological architectures, and the efficacy of targeted agents such as trastuzumab is strongly histology‑dependent, being effective only in HER2‑positive tissue.
In pathology, the term is employed to describe diagnostic criteria that require corroboration from histological morphology.
Critics argue that the term can obscure the underlying mechanisms, leading to a reliance on descriptive morphology