Blog Series Part 3 of 5

Unlocking FFPE Archives - Part 3: Manual Methods vs Modern Science

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FFPE

Part 3 of the Unlocking FFPE Archives blog series.

Third try. Third failure. The fume hood is running. The xylene smells terrible. And the protocol that worked last Tuesday is giving nothing but debris.

Sound familiar? Here's the question nobody was asking: Is it your technique—or is it the physics?

Researcher working with FFPE samples in a fume hood, representing the complexity of manual processing

The Problem Isn't Technique

Traditional FFPE processing has twelve pipetting steps. Each one introduces variance. Timing, temperature, volume—tiny differences that compound into big problems.

Even skilled technicians can't deliver identical results every time. That's not a criticism. That's physics. Human hands aren't machines.

Variability Is the Hidden Enemy

When results change run-to-run, something is wrong. But what? The samples look similar. The protocols are the same. The technician hasn't changed.

The culprit is usually variability. Batch effects that look like biology but aren't. Different results every time you try. And nobody catches it until the data comes back wrong.

What If the Workflow Was Redesigned?

Purpose-built automation changes the equation. Systems like the Singulator were designed specifically for this challenge. Not adapted from other uses—built from scratch.

Fewer pipetting steps. Consistent timing. No human variability in the critical phases. The machine doesn't have a bad day.

Side-by-side comparison of manual vs. automated FFPE processing workflows

The Real Question

Automation isn't about laziness. It's about physics. It's about removing the variables that human hands can't control.

The debate isn't really manual versus modern. It's variability versus reproducibility. Which outcome matters more?

Transform Your Workflow

Ready to remove the variability that human hands can't control?