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Dive into the research topics where Fumi Hasegawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Fumi Hasegawa.


Surgical Laparoscopy Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques | 2013

Oncological 3-port laparoscopic colectomy by 1 surgeon and 1 camera operator: a preliminary report.

Fumi Hasegawa; Yutaka J. Kawamura; Junichi Sasaki; Shingo Tsujinaka; Fumio Konishi

This retrospective study analyzed the short-term outcomes of oncological reduced-port laparoscopic colectomy (RPLC) using 3 ports performed by 1 surgeon and 1 camera operator. Patients who underwent laparoscopic colectomy for colorectal carcinoma in 2010 and 2011 were divided into 2 groups: the CLC group, which included 62 patients who underwent a conventional laparoscopic colectomy and the RPLC group, which included 28 patients who underwent reduced-port laparoscopic colectomy, respectively. There were no significant differences between the groups with regard to TNM stage, estimated blood loss, complications, conversion rate, pain score, the length of postoperative stay, or the number of harvested lymph nodes. However, the prevalence of right-side colectomy was higher and the operative time was significantly shorter in the RPLC group. RPLC was technically feasible, providing that the appropriate patients were selected. Therefore, even though its surgical benefit might be subtle, we believe that RPLC definitively contributes to the reduction of equipment and manpower costs and will be considered as a standard procedure in the near future.


Oncology Reports | 2017

Clinical and molecular assessment of regorafenib monotherapy.

Nao Kakizawa; Koichi Suzuki; Taro Fukui; Yuji Takayama; Kosuke Ichida; Yuta Muto; Fumi Hasegawa; Fumiaki Watanabe; Rina Kikugawa; Shingo Tsujinaka; Kazushige Futsuhara; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Hiroshi Noda; Toshiki Rikiyama

Regorafenib has shown survival benefits in metastatic colorectal cancer patients who were exacerbated after all standard therapies. Some patients, however, exhibit severe adverse events (AEs) resulting in treatment discontinuation. Therefore, the selection of patients likely to benefit from regorafenib is crucial. Twenty patients were treated with regorafenib for metastatic colorectal cancer; 122 plasma samples were taken from 16 of these patients for monitoring of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in the blood. The treatment response, AEs, overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS) and tumor morphologic changes on CT images were evaluated. KRAS mutant ctDNA was determined using digital PCR. Median PFS and OS were 2.5 and 5.9 months, respectively. Treatment was discontinued because of disease progression (PD) in 10 patients, and AEs in another 10 patients. AEs included hyperbilirubinemia, severe fatigue and skin rash. Hyperbilirubinemia was seen in two patients with multiple bilateral liver metastases, and severe fatigue in another 2 patients with poor performance status (PS). These severe AEs resulted in treatment discontinuation. Ten patients had a median PFS of 2.1 months with AE related discontinuation; PD occurred at 3.5 months (p=0.00334). Four patients exhibited a morphologic response, achieving better PFS times of 3.5, 5.3, 5.6 and 14.2 months. Emergence of the KRAS mutation in ctDNA was observed during anti-EGFR antibody treatment in 3 patients among 11 with KRAS wild-type tumors; it was detectable in the blood prior to radiographic detection of PD. Moreover, the KRAS mutation declined in two patients during regorafenib monotherapy. These patients were re-challenged with anti-EGFR antibody. Patients with extensive multiple liver metastases or poor PS are unlikely to benefit from regorafenib. Patients with a morphologic response will probably benefit from regorafenib with adequate management of other AEs. KRAS monitoring in ctDNA could be useful regarding treatment response and in determining treatment strategy.


Asian Journal of Endoscopic Surgery | 2017

Laparoscopic resection of retroperitoneal ectopic thyroid tissue: Retroperitoneal ectopic thyroid tissue

Sawako Tamaki; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Soutoku Someya; Hideki Ishikawa; Nao Kakizawa; Fumi Hasegawa; Hiroyuki Tanaka; Rina Kikugawa; Shingo Tsujinaka; Akira Tanaka; Alan Kawarai Lefor; Toshiki Rikiyama

A 43‐year‐old otherwise healthy woman was found to have a retroperitoneal mass during a routine medical examination and was referred for further evaluation. Abdominal CT scan showed a well‐delineated, low‐density area that exhibited heterogeneous contrast enhancement. The area measured about 20 mm in size and was to the left of the aorta at the level of the inferior mesenteric artery. MRI showed a mass with heterogeneous hypointensity on T1‐weighted images and heterogeneous hyperintensity on T2‐weighted images. PET‐CT scan showed slightly increased 18F‐fluorodeoxyglucose accumulation within the mass. Laparoscopic resection was performed. A smooth, brownish mass was seen in the retroperitoneum and was resected with minimal blood loss. Histopathological examination showed a nodular mass measuring 40 × 26 × 20 mm that was composed solely of ectopic thyroid tissue. This case shows the exceptional development of ectopic thyroid in the infradiaphragmatic retroperitoneum and demonstrates the usefulness of laparoscopy for resecting such masses.


Oncotarget | 2018

Monitoring circulating tumor DNA revealed dynamic changes in KRAS status in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

Yuji Takayama; Koichi Suzuki; Yuta Muto; Kosuke Ichida; Taro Fukui; Nao Kakizawa; Hideki Ishikawa; Fumiaki Watanabe; Fumi Hasegawa; Masaaki Saito; Shingo Tsujinaka; Kazushige Futsuhara; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Hiroshi Noda; Fumio Konishi; Toshiki Rikiyama

KRAS mutated circulating tumor DNA (MctDNA) can be monitored in the blood of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), but dynamic changes have not been determined. Four hundred and fifty-seven plasma samples were collected prospectively from 85 mCRC patients who underwent chemotherapy. MctDNA in plasma was detected by droplet digital PCR, and the percentage of MctDNA in total circulating cell-free DNA was calculated. KRAS assessment in tumor tissues showed 29 patients with the mutant-type (MT) and 56 patients with the wild-type (WT). Twenty-three of 29 MT patients (79.3%) and 28 of 56 WT patients (50.0%) showed MctDNA. Emergence of MctDNA was recognized during treatments with various drugs. Regardless of KRAS status in tumor tissues, patients with MctDNA in blood showed poor progression-free survival with first-line treatment. Median percentage of MctDNA accounted for 10.10% in MT patients and 0.22% in WT patients. These differences between MT and WT likely affected patterns of changes in MctDNA. KRAS monitoring identified dynamic changes in MctDNA, such as continuous, intermittent, and transient changes (quick elevation and disappearance). Emergence of MctDNA involved drug resistance, except for transient changes, which were seen in WT patients and likely corresponded with the drug response. Transient changes could be involved in recovery of sensitivity to anti-EGFR antibody in WT patients. Monitoring MctDNA during various treatments showed dynamic changes in KRAS status and could provide useful information for determining treatments for patients with mCRC.


Oncology Letters | 2017

Morphological response contributes to patient selection for rescue liver resection in chemotherapy patients with initially un-resectable colorectal liver metastasis

Koichi Suzuki; Yuta Muto; Kosuke Ichida; Taro Fukui; Yuji Takayama; Nao Kakizawa; Takaharu Kato; Fumi Hasegawa; Fumiaki Watanabe; Yuji Kaneda; Rina Kikukawa; Masaaki Saito; Shingo Tsujinaka; Kazushige Futsuhara; Osamu Takata; Hiroshi Noda; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Hirokazu Kiyozaki; Fumio Konishi; Toshiki Rikiyama

Morphological response is considered an improved surrogate to the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) model with regard to predicting the prognosis for patients with colorectal liver metastases. However, its use as a decision-making tool for surgical intervention has not been examined. The present study assessed the morphological response in 50 patients who underwent chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab for initially un-resectable colorectal liver metastases. Changes in tumor morphology between heterogeneous with uncertain borders and homogeneous with clear borders were defined as an optimal response (OR). Patients were also assessed as having an incomplete response (IR), and an absence of marked changes was assessed as no response (NR). No significant difference was observed in progression-free survival (PFS) between complete response/partial response (CR/PR) and stable disease/progressive disease (SD/PD), according to RECIST. By contrast, PFS for OR/IR patients was significantly improved compared with that for NR patients (13.2 vs. 8.7 months; P=0.0426). Exclusion of PD enhanced the difference in PFS between OR/IR and NR patients (15.1 vs. 9.3 months; P<0.0001), whereas no difference was observed between CR/PR and SD. The rate of OR and IR in patients treated with bevacizumab was 47.4% (9/19), but only 19.4% (6/31) for patients that were not administered bevacizumab. Comparison of the survival curves between OR/IR and NR patients revealed similar survival rates at 6 months after chemotherapy, but the groups exhibited different survival rates subsequent to this period of time. Patients showing OR/IR within 6 months appeared to be oncologically stable and could be considered as candidates for surgical intervention, including rescue liver resection. Comparing the pathological and morphological features of the tumor with representative optimal response, living tumor cells were revealed to be distributed within the area of vascular reconstruction induced by bevacizumab, resulting in a predictive value for prognosis in the patients treated with bevacizumab. The present findings provided the evidence for physicians to consider patients with previously un-resectable metastatic colorectal cancer as candidates for surgical treatment. Morphological response is a useful decision-making tool for evaluating these patients for rescue liver resection following chemotherapy.


Surgical Case Reports | 2018

The surgical treatment of acute and severe diversion colitis mimicking ulcerative colitis: a case report

Nao Kakizawa; Shingo Tsujinaka; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Rina Kikugawa; Fumi Hasegawa; Hideki Ishikawa; Sawako Tamaki; Jun Takahashi; Toshiki Rikiyama

BackgroundDiversion colitis (DC) is characterized by nonspecific inflammation in the remaining colon or rectum, and loss of the fecal stream plays a major role in the disease’s development. Although the majority of patients are asymptomatic, medical and/or surgical treatment is required for those who are symptomatic. There is a particular interest on how to manage patients with acute and severe clinical presentations, but the pathogenesis is not fully understood. We report the rare case of a man with acute and severe DC mimicking ulcerative colitis (UC) with extra-intestinal manifestations that was successfully managed with surgical treatment.Case presentationA 68-year-old man with a history of laparoscopic intersphincteric resection of the rectum with diverting loop ileostomy for lower rectal cancer suffered from anastomotic stenosis requiring repeated endoscopic dilatation. His loop stoma was not reversed because these treatments were unsuccessful. He denied having a history of inflammatory bowel disease. Twelve years postoperatively, he developed a perineal abscess requiring drainage. Subsequently, he developed a high-grade fever, bloody discharge per anus, and skin ulcers in the right ankle and around the stoma. Because culture tests were negative for bacteria, it was deemed that his acute illness reflected an inflammatory response rather than an infectious disease. Colonoscopy revealed anastomotic stenosis, a colonic fistula, and mucosa that hemorrhaged easily, with lacerations. A pathological examination with biopsy revealed inflammatory infiltration without malignancy. After reviewing the patient’s clinical episodes and discussing the case with physicians in multiple specialties, we performed total colectomy with end ileostomy in accordance with the abdominoperineal resection. The postoperative course was uneventful. A resected specimen showed atrophic mucosa with the disappearance of haustra in the distal colon, as well as edematous and dilated mucosa in the proximal colon. The pathological diagnosis was suggestive of UC, including erosion and ulceration in edematous wall, crypt abscess, and inflammatory infiltration into the mucosa. The skin ulcers in the right ankle and around the stoma healed over time.ConclusionsDC can eventuate in a long-term period after fecal diversion surgery, possibly with extra-intestinal manifestations mimicking UC. Surgical treatment seems feasible for patients with acute and severe DC.


Surgery | 2018

Effect of triclosan-coated sutures on the incidence of surgical site infection after abdominal wall closure in gastroenterological surgery: a double-blind, randomized controlled trial in a single center

Kosuke Ichida; Hiroshi Noda; Rina Kikugawa; Fumi Hasegawa; Tamotsu Obitsu; Daisuke Ishioka; Rintaro Fukuda; Ayuha Yoshizawa; Shingo Tsujinaka; Toshiki Rikiyama

Background: Surgical site infection is one of the most common postoperative complications after gastroenterologic surgery. This study investigated the effect of triclosan‐coated sutures in decreasing the incidence of surgical site infections after abdominal wall closure in gastroenterologic surgery. Methods: A prospective, double‐blind, randomized, controlled parallel adaptive group‐sequential superiority trial was conducted from March 2014 to March 2017 in a single center. Eligible patients were those who underwent gastroenterologic surgery. Patients were allocated randomly to receive either abdominal wall closure with triclosan‐coated sutures (the study group) or sutures without triclosan (the control group). The primary end point was the incidence of superficial or deep surgical site infections within 30 days after operation. This study was registered with the University Hospital Medical Information Network‐Clinical Trials Registry (http://www.umin.ac.jp/ctr/), identification number UMIN000013054. Results: A total of 1,013 patients (study group, 508 patients; control group, 505 patients) were analyzed by a modified intention‐to‐treat approach. The wounds in 990 (97.7%) of the 1,013 patients were classified as clean‐contaminated. The primary end point (incidence of superficial or deep surgical site infections) was 35 (6.9%) of 508 patients in the study group and 30 (5.9%) of 505 in the control group. The incidence of surgical site infections did not differ markedly between the 2 groups (95% confidence interval: 0.686–2.010, P = .609). Of the 65 infections, 42 (64.6%) were superficial surgical site infections, with similar frequencies in the 2 groups, and 23 (35.4%) were deep surgical site infections, again with similar frequencies in the 2 groups. Conclusion: Triclosan‐coated sutures did not decrease the incidence of surgical site infections after abdominal wall closure in gastroenterologic surgery.


Journal of surgical case reports | 2018

Intussusception secondary to descending colon lipoma presenting with simultaneous acute appendicitis

Nozomi Kikuchi; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Jun Takahashi; Noriya Takayama; Sawako Tamaki; Hideki Ishikawa; Nao Kakizawa; Fumi Hasegawa; Rina Kikugawa; Shingo Tsujinaka; Alan Kawarai Lefor; Toshiki Rikiyama

Abstract We report a patient with a descending colon lipoma presenting with hematochezia who developed intussusception, which was simultaneously accompanied by acute appendicitis. A 43-year-old man presented with hematochezia. Colonoscopy revealed a submucosal tumor with a reddish surface in the descending colon. A solid mass with fat density value measuring 5 cm in diameter was observed in the descending colon on CT. While awaiting elective resection, the patient developed lower abdominal pain. CT demonstrated antegrade colo-colonic intussusception in the descending colon. Simultaneously, the appendix was inflamed with a high density intraluminal lesion suspected to be a fecalith. The diagnosis of simultaneous intussusception and acute appendicitis was made. Appendectomy and partial resection of the descending colon was performed. Histopathological examination was consistent with descending colon lipoma and acute appendicitis. The mechanism for developing hematochezia and the risk for development of colo-colonic intussusception due to large colon lipoma and acute appendicitis were highlighted.


Case Reports in Surgery | 2018

Surgical Resection with Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Locoregionally Recurrent Appendiceal Cancer Invading the External Iliac Vessels

Jun Takahashi; Shingo Tsujinaka; Nao Kakizawa; Noriya Takayama; Erika Machida; Kazuki Iseya; Fumi Hasegawa; Rina Kikugawa; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Koichi Suzuki; Toshiki Rikiyama

Recent advancements in multimodal therapy can provide oncologic benefits for patients with recurrent colorectal cancer. This report presents a case of locoregionally recurrent appendiceal cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgical resection with vascular reconstruction. A 68-year-old Japanese woman was diagnosed with appendiceal cancer and underwent ileocecal resection. The pathological evaluation revealed KRAS-mutant adenocarcinoma with the final stage of T4bN1M0. She received oral fluorouracil-based adjuvant chemotherapy. One year later, she was found to have peritoneal dissemination in the pelvic cavity and vaginal metastasis. She received an oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy followed by surgical resection. One year after the second surgery, she developed a locoregional recurrence involving the right external iliac vessels and small intestine. She received an irinotecan-based regimen with bevacizumab as neoadjuvant chemotherapy, followed by surgical resection. At first, a femoro-femoral bypass was made to secure the blood supply to the right lower extremities. Subsequently, an en bloc resection including the recurrent tumor and the external iliac vessels was completed. Surgical resection for recurrent colorectal cancer is often technically challenging because of the tumor location and invasion to adjacent organs. In this case, a surgical approach with persistent chemotherapy achieved oncologic resection of locoregionally recurrent appendiceal cancer.


Oncology Letters | 2017

Sequential administration of XELOX and XELIRI is effective, feasible and well tolerated by patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

Taro Fukui; Koichi Suzuki; Kosuke Ichida; Yuji Takayama; Nao Kakizawa; Yuta Muto; Fumi Hasegawa; Fumiaki Watanabe; Rina Kikugawa; Masaaki Saito; Shingo Tsujinaka; Yasuyuki Miyakura; Toshiki Rikiyama

Sequential administration of the chemotherapy regimes capecitabine and oxaliplatin (XELOX) and capecitabine and irinotecan (XELIRI) in the first- to second-line treatment setting would allow patients to be managed more easily in an outpatient unit. However, a small number of studies have raised concerns of cumulative adverse events as a consequence of the continuous use of capecitabine. To investigate this, the present study conducted a retrospective review of 81 consecutive metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients treated with the oxaliplatin, fluorouracil and leucovorin-irinotecan, fluorouracil and leucovorin (FOLFOX-FOFIRI/F-F) regimen (n=40) or the XELOX-XELIRI (X-X) regimen (n=41) in first- to second-line chemotherapy in Saitama Medical Center between 2006 and 2012. The disease control rate (DCR), the progression free survival (PFS), the overall survival (OS) and the time to failure of strategy (TFS) from first to second-line chemotherapy, as well as adverse events, were assessed and compared between patients receiving X-X or F-F. A total of 10 and 20 patients were additionally treated with bevacizumab in the F-F and X-X regimens, respectively, during first or second-line chemotherapy. There was no significant difference in DCR and the median PFS between the two regimens for first or second-line chemotherapy. There was no significant difference in the median OS and TFS between the two regimens (OS=24.5 and TFS=14 months in the F-F vs. 23.2 and 12.0 months in the X-X). Regarding adverse events, 45.0% of patients (18/40) exhibited grade 3-4 neutropenia throughout treatment with F-F. Whilst, 15.0% of patients (6/41) exhibited grade 3 hypertension throughout treatment with X-X, which was effectively controlled by a single antihypertensive drug. The results show that sequential administration of X-X is as effective and feasible as F-F treatment, while additionally reducing the frequency of infusion visits and eliminating the need for a central venous access device or home infusion pump, thereby offering a more convenient treatment option to patients with mCRC.

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Nao Kakizawa

Jichi Medical University

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Rina Kikugawa

Jichi Medical University

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Koichi Suzuki

Jichi Medical University

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Kosuke Ichida

Jichi Medical University

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Taro Fukui

Jichi Medical University

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Yuji Takayama

Jichi Medical University

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