We've updated our Privacy Policy to make it clearer how we use your personal data. We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. You can read our Cookie Policy here.

Advertisement
An image displaying a Newsletter on tablet, laptop & mobile

To continue reading this article, sign up for FREE to

Technology Networks logo


Membership is FREE and provides you with instant access to email newsletters, digital publications, our full content catalogue & more...

Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital Uses the Beckman’s CEQ 8000

Read time: Less than a minute

Neuropathologists at Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital use the Beckman Coulter CEQ 8000 genetic analysis system to examine brain tumour samples.

Identification of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) helps oncologists identify those patients whose malignancy is most likely to respond to chemotherapy.

Tumours which appear histologically identical may exhibit different clinical behaviour, including divergent responses to therapy.

Classifying tumours by loss of heterozygosity enables identification of tumours which will respond to chemotherapy.

Using the CEQ 8000 system, the Glasgow team identify LOH by comparing a patient’s brain tumour tissue with their own normal cells obtained from a small blood sample or a buccal swab.

Thomas Kerr working with Dr Willie Stewart in Neuropathology at the Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, explains, "By screening patients using the CEQ 8000 to analyse LOH we can identify those for whom chemotherapy has the potential to add 8–10 years to their lives."

"Our hope is to offer a referral service to neuropathology centres further afield, so targeting limited NHS resources more effectively and allowing neuro-oncology services outwith the region access to this investigation when planning patient management."

CEQ software is desigend to deliver high-precision sizing of amplified DNA fragments with accurate allele assignment and locus identification, and automatic analysis of LOH.