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Dive into the research topics where Hideki Masunari is active.

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Featured researches published by Hideki Masunari.


World Journal of Surgery | 2003

Hepatic Resection Combined with Portal Vein or Hepatic Artery Reconstruction for Advanced Carcinoma of the Hilar Bile Duct and Gallbladder

Hiroshi Shimada; Itaru Endo; Mitsutaka Sugita; Hideki Masunari; Yoshiro Fujii; Kuniya Tanaka; Koichi Misuta; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo

Hepatectomy with vascular reconstruction for biliary malignancy remains controversial. This study aimed to clarify the indications for surgery. Patients with advanced hilar bile duct cancer (HBDC) (n = 26) and gallbladder cancer (GBC) involving the hepatoduodenal ligament (n = 13) who underwent hepatectomy were enrolled. They were divided into two groups on the basis of whether vascular reconstruction was performed (HBDC, 10 yes vs. 16 no; GBC, 5 yes vs. 8 no). Portal vein (PV) reconstruction was performed on the right branch in seven patients and on the left branch in two; hepatic artery (HA) reconstruction was done on the right branch in 11 patients and on the left branch in 1. Five patients with HBDC and one with GBC underwent both PV and HA reconstruction. Patency rates were 88.0% and 83.3% for PV and HA reconstructions, respectively. Vascular reconstruction-related morbidity occurred in one patient with fatal liver failure owing to a portal thrombus and in two patients with multiple liver abscesses caused by arterial obstruction. Microsurgery eliminated reconstruction-related morbidity. Mortality in vascular reconstruction cases was 13.3% (2/15), and in those without reconstruction it was 8.3% (2/24). Curability rates (R0 and R1+R2) were 50.0% and 56.0% for HBDC and 40.0% and 62.5% for GBC, respectively. The 3-year survivals of HBDC patients were, respectively, 33% and 42%, and the 5-year survivals were 18% and 25%, whereas for GBC the 1-year survivals were 20% and 60% and the 2-year survivals 0% and 25%. Two patients with vascular involvement who underwent PV with HA reconstruction survived more than 3 years. Hepatectomy with vascular reconstruction for selected HBDC patients offers low surgical risk and increased survival by curable resection, but it is not recommended for advanced GBC.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2000

Appraisal of surgical resection of gallbladder cancer with special reference to lymph node dissection

Hiroshi Shimada; Itaru Endo; Yoshiro Fujii; Noriyuki Kamiya; Hideki Masunari; Osamu Kunihiro; Kuniya Tanaka; Kouichiro Misuta; Shinji Togo

Abstract. Background: Radical lymph node dissection in surgery for advanced gallbladder cancer is controversial. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of lymph node dissection based on the clinico-pathologic results. Patients: Seventy-three patients who underwent radical surgery including systematic dissection of the N1+N2 region lymph node plus some of the para-aortic nodes were reviewed. Results: pT1 patients had no lymph node metastasis, but pT2 and pT3/pT4 patients had lymph node metastasis at a rate of 50.0% (13/26) and 83.3% (25/30), respectively. As infiltration of the hepatoduodenal ligament (Binf) became severe, the rate and extent of lymph node metastasis increased. There were four 5-year survivors with lymph node involvement. The 5-year survival rates are 77.0% in pN0 cases and 27.3% in pN1 cases (P<0.01). There was no difference in survival between pN1 and pN2 patients. However, significant differences in survival were observed between pN0/1 and pN2/3 patients when these patients were limited to Binf0/1. Examination of the recurrence pattern showed that most patients with pN0/1/2 had no regional lymph node recurrence, but there was para-aortic lymph node recurrence in patients with pN3 outside the dissected region. Significant prognostic factors influencing survival after surgery by multivariate analysis were pN2/3, pT, and residual tumor. Conclusion: Systematic lymph node dissection of N1, N2, and part of the para-aortic region improves survival in advanced gallbladder cancer patients, especially in those without either para-aortic lymph node metastases or Binf2/3.


World Journal of Surgery | 2004

Microscopic liver metastasis: Prognostic factor for patients with pT2 gallbladder carcinoma

Itaru Endo; Hiroshi Shimada; Atsushi Takimoto; Yoshiro Fujii; Yasuhiko Miura; Mitsutaka Sugita; Daisuke Morioka; Hideki Masunari; Kuniya Tanaka; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo

Hepatic metastasis is the most frequent mode of recurrence of advanced gallbladder cancer after radical resection. The aims of this study were to clarify the clinical significance of microscopic liver metastasis from pT2 gallbladder cancer and to clarify whether partial hepatectomy can prevent hepatic recurrence in patients with microscopic liver metastasis. The subjects included 20 patients with pT2 tumors who underwent radical surgery and partial hepatectomy with lymph node dissection. Microscopic liver metastasis was defined as a distant metastatic nodule including cancer cell nests in the lumen of the portal vein and discrete nodular lesions in the liver, all less than 5 mm in diameter. Cox’s proportional hazard regression was used to analyze factors that contributed to outcomes. Microscopic metastases were detected in the resected livers from 5 of 20 patients. There were more metastatic lesions within 1 cm of the gallbladder bed than were located 1 to 2 cm away from it. Microscopic liver metastases showed a strong correlation with the extent of blood vessel invasion around the primary tumor and were frequently detected in patients with a primary tumor localized on the hepatic side and with more than 3 cm of subserosal invasion. In four of five patients with microscopic liver metastases, recurrence was found in the remnant liver, which led to death within 15 months after the initial operation. Microscopic liver metastasis, operative curability, and lymph node metastasis were assessed as independent prognostic factors. A large proportion of patients with microscopic liver metastasis suffered from hepatic recurrence. Our results suggest that partial hepatectomy alone cannot prevent hepatic recurrence in patients with microscopic liver metastasis.


Digestive Surgery | 2002

Caudate Lobectomy Combined with Resection of the Inferior Vena cava and Its Reconstruction by a Pericardial Autograft Patch

Shinji Togo; Kuniya Tanaka; Itaru Endo; Daisuke Morioka; Yasuhiko Miura; Hideki Masunari; Toru Kubota; Yasuhiko Nagano; Hidenobu Masui; Hitoshi Sekido; Hiroshi Shimada

A 53-year-old woman with remnant liver metastasis originating from colon cancer was referred to our department. She underwent successful caudate lobectomy combined with resection of the inferior vena cava (IVC), including reconstruction with a pericardial autograft patch. IVC clamping was performed between the IVC below the confluence of the left hepatic vein and the infrahepatic IVC in order to preserve the hepatic circulation. After 18 months, the graft was patent and there was no sign of recurrence. A part of the pericardium used as an autograft for patch repair of the defect of the IVC was very useful because it was easily available, required only division of the diaphragm, and was of sufficient length and width.


Hepato-gastroenterology | 2012

Is lymph-node micrometastasis in gallbladder cancer a significant prognostic factor?

Tanabe M; Itaru Endo; Hideki Masunari; Mitsutaka Sugita; Daisuke Morioka; Tetsuya Ishikawa; Yasushi Ichikawa; Hiroshi Shimada

BACKGROUND/AIMS The purpose of our study was to investigate prognostic significance of lymph-node micrometastasis in gallbladder carcinoma. METHODOLOGY In total, 1,094 lymph nodes from 41 patients who had undergone radical resection with lymph-node dissection, including para-aortic lymph nodes were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and immunostained with anti-cytokeratin 7/8 antibody. Micrometastasis in each lymph node was defined as tumor cells that were detectable only by immunohistochemical evaluation and were not detected by H&E staining. RESULTS Metastases were detected in 163 lymph nodes (14.9%) by H&E staining. Micrometastases were found in 25 of the remaining lymph nodes (2.3%). Among 24 patients with lymph node metastasis based on the H&E staining, 12 had micrometastases. Of the 17 patients in whom lymph-node metastasis was not detected by the H&E staining, one was found to have micrometastasis. Micrometastasis correlated significantly with lymph node metastasis on H&E staining and pN (Tumor-Node-Metastasis 5th ed.). On multivariate analysis of data from 17 node-positive patients who underwent curative resection, micrometastasis and microscopic venous invasion were significant prognostic factors. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that micrometastasis might be traces of scatter of cancer cells to the whole body rather than an event in an initial stage of the metastasis.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2008

Retroportal Hepaticojejunostomy for Extended Resection of Hilar Bile Ducts

Itaru Endo; Mitsutaka Sugita; Hideki Masunari; Kenichi Yoshida; Kazuhisa Takeda; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo; Hiroshi Shimada

High hepatic duct resection sometimes is unavoidable in achieving curative resection of hilar cholangiocarcinoma, as tumor cells can extend further than expected along the bile ducts from the macroscopically evident cancer. In patients undergoing left hemihepatectomy with caudate lobectomy whose bile duct must be severed at the subsegmental bile duct levels, the orifices of the posterior bile ducts would lie behind the right portal vein. Conventional hepaticojejunostomy would be risky in such cases because an anastomosis performed in the usual manner would be subjected to strain. Instead, between 2002 and 2004, three patients underwent retroportal hepaticojejunostomy using a jejunal limb mobilized and positioned behind the hepatoduodenal ligament. Primary tumors were classified as type IV in the Bismuth–Corlette classification. Tension-free hepaticojejunal anastomosis was performed successfully in all three patients; insufficiency of the hepaticojejunostomy did not develop. Neither early nor late complications directly related to this method occurred. Retroportal hepaticojejunostomy, thus, permits more peripheral resection of the hepatic duct while providing a sufficient operative field for safe, tension-free anastomosis. This technique is very useful for patients undergoing left hemihepatectomy requiring high hilar resection of the bile duct.


Journal of Hepato-biliary-pancreatic Surgery | 2001

Indications for curative resection of advanced gallbladder cancer with hepatoduodenal ligament invasion

Itaru Endo; Hiroshi Shimada; Yoshiro Fujii; Mitsutaka Sugita; Hideki Masunari; Yasuhiko Miura; Kuniya Tanaka; Koichiro Misuta; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2008

Surgical Anatomy of Hepatic Hilum with Special Reference of the Plate System and Extrahepatic Duct

Hideki Masunari; Hiroshi Shimada; Itaru Endo; Yoshiro Fujii; Kuniya Tanaka; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2003

Is parenchyma-preserving hepatectomy a noble option in the surgical treatment for high-risk patients with hilar bile duct cancer?

Hiroshi Shimada; Itaru Endo; Mitsutaka Sugita; Hideki Masunari; Yoshiro Fujii; Kuniya Tanaka; Hitoshi Sekido; Shinji Togo


Hepato-gastroenterology | 2002

Usefulness of 3-dimensional computed tomography for caudate lobectomy by transhepatic anterior approach.

Shinji Togo; Ryoichi Shizawa; Eisyu Kanemura; Kuniya Tanaka; Hideki Masunari; Itaru Endo; Hitoshi Sekido; Hiroshi Shimada

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Hiroshi Shimada

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Itaru Endo

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Hitoshi Sekido

Yokohama City University

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Yoshiro Fujii

Yokohama City University

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Yasuhiko Miura

Yokohama City University

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