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immunophenotypic

Immunophenotypic describes the phenotype of cells as defined by the expression of specific antigens detected by immunophenotyping. Immunophenotyping uses monoclonal antibodies directed against surface or intracellular markers to characterize cell lineages and maturation states.

The most common platforms are flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. Flow cytometry analyzes thousands of cells per

Applications include classification of hematologic malignancies, such as identifying B- or T-lineage leukemias and differentiating lymphomas,

In solid tumors, immunophenotyping by immunohistochemistry or other antibody-based assays helps determine lineage and origin when

Markers are often reported as CD antigens or lineage-specific proteins; panels are tailored to the clinical

Guidelines from the World Health Organization and international consortia provide criteria that integrate immunophenotypic data with

second
using
fluorescently
labeled
antibodies
to
profile
multiple
markers
simultaneously;
immunohistochemistry
visualizes
marker
expression
within
tissue
sections,
preserving
histologic
context.
and
distinguishing
malignant
from
reactive
processes.
Immunophenotyping
also
supports
diagnosis,
prognosis,
and
treatment
planning,
and
it
is
used
to
monitor
minimal
residual
disease
and
immune
reconstitution
after
therapy.
morphology
is
inconclusive,
aiding
diagnostic
categorization
and
therapeutic
decisions.
question
and
disease
category.
Interpretation
requires
expertise
and
standardized
approaches,
and
results
can
be
influenced
by
sample
quality,
fixation,
and
prior
therapy,
which
may
affect
antigen
expression.
genetic
and
morphologic
findings
for
disease
classification
and
reporting.