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Featured researches published by Fumitaka Ito.


Respiration | 2010

Use of multidetector row CT to evaluate the need for bronchial arterial embolization in hemoptysis patients.

Hidenori Mori; Yasushi Ohno; Yusuke Tsuge; Masanori Kawasaki; Fumitaka Ito; Junki Endo; Norihiko Funaguchi; Bu Lin Bai La; Masayuki Kanematsu; Shinya Minatoguchi

Background: Bronchial artery (BA) embolization (BAE) is recommended as a minimally invasive therapy for hemoptysis, though some patients recover after only conservative treatment. Objectives: The purpose of our study was to assess the characteristics of BAs using multidetector row computed tomography (MDCT) and identify BAs requiring BAE without BA angiography (BAG). Methods: We retrospectively studied 41 patients and classified the visualized BAs into groups based on their BAE and bleeding statuses. Patients presenting with massive hemoptysis requiring emergency BAE were excluded. Patients presenting with persistent hemoptysis that was resistant to conservative treatment received BAE. Radiologists measured BA diameters at the ostium, bronchial bifurcation and pulmonary hilum, and also evaluated the degree of vascularization. Results: MDCT enabled visualization of 102 ostia and 96 traceable BAs. Among the participating patients, 13 had at least one ectopic origin. We obtained a good correlation between BAG and MDCT diameters (r = 0.709, p < 0.001). The diameters of BAs responsible for bleeding and receiving BAE were apparently larger in each measured segment than those that were not (p < 0.05). Moreover, the diameters of arteries receiving BAE remained largely unchanged from the origin to the hilum and through the mediastinum. BAs with low MDCT scores were significantly less likely to required BAE than those with high scores (p = 0.004), and in multiple logistic regression analysis, ostium diameter and bleeding status were independent predictive factors for BAE. Conclusions: Evaluation of BAs on MDCT could be useful for identifying the anatomical characteristics of bleeding-related BAs and determining whether BAE is indicated or whether conservative treatment is sufficient.


Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Polymerase Chain Reaction Positivity of Pneumocystis jirovecii During Primary Lung Cancer Treatment

Hidenori Mori; Yasushi Ohno; Fumitaka Ito; Junki Endo; Komei Yanase; Norihiko Funaguchi; Bu Lin Bai La; Shinya Minatoguchi

OBJECTIVE When treating lung cancer, pneumocystic pneumonia is a life-threatening complication seen during chemotherapy. Polymerase chain reaction is used to detect its cause, Pneumocystis jirovecii, but polymerase chain reaction positives without pneumocystic pneumonia are sometimes seen. The purpose of this study was to assess the frequency of pneumocystic pneumonia during cancer treatment. METHODS Fifty induced sputum specimens and 4 bronchoalveolar lavage specimens collected from 50 patients with acute respiratory symptoms during anticancer therapy were retrospectively studied after classifying the patients into lung cancer (n = 29) and solid tumor (n = 21) groups. All of the patients in both groups had an interstitial shadow suspected of being pneumocystic pneumonia, and all had polymerase chain reaction tests. RESULTS Eleven of the 54 specimens were polymerase chain reaction positive, and 1 patient was clinically diagnosed with pneumocystic pneumonia. The incidence of polymerase chain reaction positivity in the lung cancer group was significantly higher than in the solid tumor group (31 vs. 5%; P = 0.03), and the incidence of subclinical pneumocystic pneumonia (29 vs. 5%; P = 0.059) also tended to be higher in that group. There were no significant biochemical differences between the two groups, irrespective of the polymerase chain reaction results. Among polymerase chain reaction-positive patients in the lung cancer group, the cumulative dose of corticosteroid administration tended to be higher than among the polymerase chain reaction-negative patients (P = 0.09). Following the polymerase chain reaction tests, nearly all polymerase chain reaction-positive patients without pneumocystic pneumonia received antipneumocystic agents, and none developed pneumocystic pneumonia. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest polymerase chain reaction positivity for P. jirovecii will be detected in a fraction of lung cancer patients. Although it is difficult to predict the need for administration of pneumocystic pneumonia treatment to subclinical pneumocystic pneumonia based on polymerase chain reaction and biochemical results, polymerase chain reaction-positive patients should be followed-up with antipneumocystic agents to ensure they are not at an early stage of pneumocystic pneumonia.


Journal of Asthma | 2009

Effect of Intermittent Systemic Corticosteroid on Bone Metabolism in Bronchial Asthma Patients

Hidenori Mori; Haruhito Tanaka; Yasushi Ohno; Fumitaka Ito; Norihiko Funaguchi; Junki Endo; Bu Lin Bai La; Shinya Minatoguchi

The purpose of this study was to assess the effect on bone mineral density (BMD) of systemic corticosteroid (SCS) intermittently administered for rescue from asthmatic exacerbation. Through digital image processing and calculation of four other indices, BMD was compared in groups of asthmatic patients receiving inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) alone or ICS plus intermittent SCS. We defined SCS as intermittent administration of the equivalent of 1 mg/day prednisolone in the management of asthma exacerbations during the previous 1 year. Serum NTX, a bone resorption marker, was significantly higher (p = 0.02) in the SCS group than the ICS group. SCS had no effect on BMD, although the frequency of patients at “high-risk” for osteoporosis according to the Female Osteoporosis Self-assessment Tool for Asia (FOSTA) tended to be higher in the SCS group (35%) than in the ICS (28%) or control (10%) group. Because patients in the ICS group already had impaired respiratory function due to repeated asthma exacerbations, it was difficult to determine whether it was asthma itself or SCS that is the risk factor for osteoporosis. In addition, the response of biochemical markers of bone turnover to intermittent SCS remains unclear and likely differs from that elicited by high-dose, short-term, or continuous SCS. That said, relatively low-dose intermittent administration of SCS raised levels of bone resorption markers, which likely reflects altered bone metabolism. Taken together, these findings suggest that, without consideration of its effects on bone, SCS administration should be avoided.


Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease | 2016

Pharmacokinetics of consecutive oral moxifloxacin (400 mg/day) in patients with respiratory tract infection

Fumitaka Ito; Yasushi Ohno; Sayaka Toyoshi; Daizo Kaito; Yanase Koumei; Junki Endo; Fumihiko Kamamiya; Hidenori Mori; Masahiro Mori; Megumi Morishita; Norihiko Funaguchi; Shinya Minatoguchi

A population pharmacokinetic analysis was performed to investigate the pharmacokinetics of moxifloxacin (400 mg) following a once-daily oral administration in 28 patients with respiratory tract infection disease. The maximum plasma concentration and the area under the plasma concentration–time curve were 3.97 µg/ml and 51.74 µg·h/ml, respectively; these values were nearly equivalent to those of healthy adult men. Two adverse drug reactions (nausea, vomiting) occurred, but both reactions were mild and nonserious and the patients recovered without treatment. The pharmacokinetic profile of moxifloxacin in Japanese patients with respiratory tract infection and an underlying disease should thus be considered safe and comparable with that in healthy adult men, and adjustment of dose may do not need for age, sex, body weight, or renal function.


Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Massive Hematuria from the Bilateral Upper Urinary Tract in a Patient Treated for Advanced Lung Cancer with Gefitinib

Hidenori Mori; Yasushi Ohno; Fumitaka Ito; Norihiko Funaguchi; Komei Yanase; Junki Endo; Masahiro Nakano; Bu Lin Bai La; Shinya Minatoguchi

We report a case of gefitinib-induced bilateral upper urinary tract bleeding in an 82-year-old woman administered the drug daily for advanced non-small cell adenocarcinoma of the lung (T4N3M0). Hematuria is an uncommon adverse effect of gefitinib, and in most cases, the bleeding site is unknown. On the 44th day of oral gefitinib administration, the patient noted asymptomatic macroscopic bloody urine. Cystoscopy revealed bleeding from the bilateral ureteric orifices without hemorrhagic inflammation of the bladder. One week later, she was admitted complaining of severe abdominal pain, and her condition was found to be complicated by liver damage and renal dysfunction. We stopped gefitinib administration and started hydration and diuresis. Renal function and urine output soon recovered, and at the request of the patient, we restarted gefitinib, administering it every other day, which was sufficient to maintain antitumor activity and stabilize the disease. On the 41st day after restarting gefitinib, hematuria and proteinuria reappeared. We therefore stopped the gefitinib, and the patient was followed with supportive care. The patients autopsy findings denied organic urologic diseases. Instead, the reproducibility of the hematuria from the upper urinary system strongly suggests an unexpected gefitinib-related adverse effect.


Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2012

Tetomilast Attenuates Elastase-Induced Pulmonary Emphysema through Inhibition of Oxidative Stress in Rabbits

Bulin Baila; Yasushi Ohno; Hisashi Nagamoto; Kounori Kotosai; Youichi Yabuuchi; Norihiko Funaguchi; Fumitaka Ito; Junki Endo; Hidenori Mori; Genzou Takemura; Takako Fujiwara; Hisayoshi Fujiwara; Shinya Minatoguchi


Anticancer Research | 2012

A Randomized Controlled Non-inferiority Study Comparing the Antiemetic Effect between Intravenous Granisetron and Oral Azasetron Based on Estimated 5-HT3 Receptor Occupancy

Junki Endo; Hirotoshi Iihara; Maya Yamada; Koumei Yanase; Fumihiko Kamiya; Fumitaka Ito; Norihiko Funaguchi; Yasushi Ohno; Shinya Minatoguchi; Yoshinori Itoh


Anticancer Research | 2017

Efficacy of Single-dose First-generation 5-HT3 Receptor Antagonist and Dexamethasone for Preventing Nausea and Vomiting Induced by Low-dose Carboplatin-based Chemotherapy

Daizo Kaito; Hirotoshi Iihara; Norihiko Funaguchi; Junki Endo; Fumitaka Ito; Komei Yanase; Sayaka Toyoshi; Yuka Sasaki; Chiemi Hirose; Natsumi Arai; Mika Kitahora; Yasushi Ohno; Yoshinori Itoh; Shinya Minatoguchi


Advances in Lung Cancer | 2017

Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor Enhances the Anticancer Effects of Cisplatin against Lung Cancer by Promoting Angiogenesis

Yun-Mo Li; Yasushi Ohno; Norihiko Funaguchi; Takenobu Gomyo; Yuka Sasaki; Sayaka Toyoshi; Daizo Kaito; Komei Yanase; Junki Endo; Fumitaka Ito; Masanori Kawasaki; Shinya Minatoguchi


Chest | 2016

Noninvasive Tissue Characterization of Lung Tumors Using Integrated Backscatter Intravascular Ultrasound: An Ex Vivo Comparative Study With Pathological Diagnosis.

Fumitaka Ito; Masanori Kawasaki; Yasushi Ohno; Sayaka Toyoshi; Megumi Morishita; Daizo Kaito; Komei Yanase; Norihiko Funaguchi; Masahiro Asano; Junki Endo; Hidenori Mori; Kazuhiro Kobayashi; Kazuhiko Nishigaki; Tatsuhiko Miyazaki; Genzou Takemura; Shinya Minatoguchi

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