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Featured researches published by Hidemitsu Tsutsui.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2006

Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) for Lung Cancers

Jitsuo Usuda; Harubumi Kato; Tetsuya Okunaka; Kinya Furukawa; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Kimito Yamada; Yasuhiro Suga; Hidetoshi Honda; Yoshitaka Nagatsuka; Tatsuo Ohira; Masahiro Tsuboi; Takashi Hirano

Photodynamic therapy (PDT), a treatment for cancer, uses a photosensitizer and laser irradiation to produce reactive oxygen in cells. In Japan, the United States, and many other countries, PDT is a treatment option for stage 0 (TisN0M0) and stage I (T1N0M0) centrally located early stage lung cancer. PDT can preserve lung function, can be repeated, and can be combined with other therapeutic modalities such as chemotherapy. Recently, mono-l-aspartyl chlorine e6 (NPe6, Laserphyrin), a second-generation photosensitizer with lower photosensitivity than Photofrin (porfimer sodium), was approved by the Japanese government and a phase II clinical study using NPe6 with a new diode laser demonstrated an excellent antitumor effect and low skin photosensitivity. We expect PDT to be widely employed in many fields and the applications of PDT to be extended because of the decreasing cost of laser equipment and lower systemic photosensitivity induced by the photosensitizer. The purpose of this review is to introduce not only recent clinical trials of PDT for centrally located early lung cancer, but also new applications of PDT for cases of peripheral-type, early-stage lung cancers. We also discuss the applications of PDT for advanced lung cancer and combined therapy using PDT and other treatments for lung cancer.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2010

Outcome of Photodynamic Therapy Using NPe6 for Bronchogenic Carcinomas in Central Airways >1.0 cm in Diameter

Jitsuo Usuda; Shuji Ichinose; Taichirou Ishizumi; Hiroki Hayashi; Keishi Ohtani; Sachio Maehara; Shoutarou Ono; Hidetoshi Honda; Naohiro Kajiwara; Osamu Uchida; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Tatsuo Ohira; Harubumi Kato; Norihiko Ikeda

Purpose: Most centrally located early lung cancers (CLELC) <1.0 cm in diameter do not invade beyond the bronchial cartilage, and photodynamic therapy (PDT) with Photofrin is currently recommended as a treatment option for such lesions. NPe6 is a second-generation photosensitizer, and because it has a longer absorption band (664 nm) than Photofrin (630 nm), we hypothesized that NPe6-PDT would exert a strong antitumor effect against cancer lesions >1.0 cm in diameter, which are assumed to involve extracartilaginous invasion and to be unsuitable for treatment with Photofrin-PDT. Experimental Design: Between June 2004 and December 2008, 75 patients (91 lesions) with CLELC underwent NPe6-PDT after the extent of their tumors had been assessed by fluorescence bronchoscopy for photodynamic diagnosis and tumor depth had been assessed by optical coherence tomography. Results: Seventy cancer lesions ≤1.0 cm in diameter and 21 lesions >1.0 cm in diameter were identified, and the complete response rate was 94.0% (66 of 70) and 90.4% (19 of 21), respectively. After the mass of large tumors and deeply invasive tumors had been reduced by electrocautery, NPe6-PDT was capable of destroying the residual cancer lesions. Conclusion: NPe6-PDT has a strong antitumor effect against CLELCs >1.0 cm in diameter that have invaded beyond the bronchial cartilage, thereby enabling the destruction of residual cancer lesions after mass reduction of large nodular- or polypoid-type lung cancers by electrocautery. The PDT guidelines for lung cancers should therefore be revised because use of NPe6-PDT will enable expansion of the clinical indications for PDT. Clin Cancer Res; 16(7); 2198–204. ©2010 AACR.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2010

Management of Multiple Primary Lung Cancer in Patients with Centrally Located Early Cancer Lesions

Jitsuo Usuda; Shuji Ichinose; Taichirou Ishizumi; Hiroki Hayashi; Keishi Ohtani; Sachio Maehara; Shoutarou Ono; Naohiro Kajiwara; Osamu Uchida; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Tatsuo Ohira; Harubumi Kato; Norihiko Ikeda

Background: Patients with centrally located early lung cancer (CLELC) are often heavy smokers with a considerably high risk of multiple primary lung cancer (MPLC) lesions; treatment strategies for such patients must preserve the cardiopulmonary function. Methods: Between July 2004 and July 2008, patients with CLELC underwent photodynamic therapy (PDT) using NPe6, second-generation photosensitizer at Tokyo Medical University Hospital. Among these patients, we retrospectively analyzed MPLC, which was treated by surgery plus PDT or PDT alone and examined the effectiveness of PDT, and we propose a treatment strategy for patients with MPLC. Results: A total of 64 patients with CLECL received NPe6-PDT, and MPLCs were found in 22 patients (34.4%) using sputum cytology and a bronchoscopical examination using autofluorescence bronchoscopy. Among these 22 patients, 10 patients underwent surgery for primary lung cancer and underwent NPe6-PDT for the treatment of secondary primary CLELC, one patient underwent PDT for CLELC as a primary lesion followed by an operation for peripheral-type lung cancer as a secondary primary lesion, and 11 patients underwent PDT alone for MPLC lesions (28 lesions) that were roentgenographically occult lung cancers. Among these 22 patients with MPLC including peripheral-type lung cancers, which were resected by surgery, all 39 CLELC lesions exhibited a complete response after PDT, and all patients were alive. Conclusions: For patients with lung cancer with a long-term history of smoking, careful follow-up examinations after surgical resection are needed considering the incidence of metachronous primary lung cancers. PDT can play an important role for the treatment strategy for MPLC.


Surgery Today | 2010

The role of airway stent placement in the management of tracheobronchial stenosis caused by inoperable advanced lung cancer

Kinya Furukawa; Junzo Ishida; Gaku Yamaguchi; Jitsuo Usuda; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Makoto Saito; Chimori Konaka; Harubumi Kato

PurposeTo our knowledge there is no in-depth report on the benefits of airway stenting, which focuses specifically on patients with inoperable advanced lung cancer causing severe central airway obstruction. We evaluated the role of airway stenting as one aspect of the multidisciplinary management of advanced lung cancer.MethodsWe performed airway stenting in 40 lung cancer patients, placing a total of 58 stents. Stenting was done as a final modality in 22 patients with terminal-stage lung cancer (group A). The other 18 patients received additional therapy after stenting (group B), 12 (66.7%) of whom were treatment-naïve on admission.ResultsThe performance status (PS) and Hugh-Jones classification (H-J) scores improved in both groups after stenting: from 3.56 to 2.48 (P = 0.001) and 4.29 to 3.20 (P = 0.004) in group A, and from 3.15 to 1.25 (P < 0.001) and 4.10 to 2.10 (P < 0.001) in group B, respectively. The median survival time and 1-year survival rate after stenting were 1.6 months and 5.1%, respectively, in group A, and 5.6 months and 25.0%, respectively, in group B.ConclusionsAirway stenting followed by adjuvant therapy may improve the survival of treatment-naïve patients with severe symptomatic airway obstruction caused by advanced lung cancer.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 2011

New aspects of photodynamic therapy for central type early stage lung cancer.

Norihiko Ikeda; Jitsuo Usuda; Harubumi Kato; Taichiro Ishizumi; Shuji Ichinose; Keishi Otani; Hidetoshi Honda; Kinya Furukawa; Tetsuya Okunaka; Hidemitsu Tsutsui

and Objective Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has come to be considered as the first choice of treatment for central type early stage lung cancer (CELC). Recent advances in the ability to diagnose CELC, and in photosensitizers, as well as sophisticated clinical management, may improve the therapeutic outcome and expand the indications of PDT.


Lung Cancer | 2010

Breast cancer resistant protein (BCRP) is a molecular determinant of the outcome of photodynamic therapy (PDT) for centrally located early lung cancer

Jitsuo Usuda; Yoshihiko Tsunoda; Shuji Ichinose; Taichirou Ishizumi; Keishi Ohtani; Sachio Maehara; Shoutarou Ono; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Tatsuo Ohira; Tetsuya Okunaka; Kinya Furukawa; Yoshikazu Sugimoto; Harubumi Kato; Norihiko Ikeda

The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter protein, BCRP (breast cancer resistance protein)/ABCG2 pumps out some types of photosensitizers used in photodynamic therapy (PDT) and causes resistance to the antitumor effect of PDT. The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between the expression of BCRP and the efficacy of PDT using Photofrin, or the second-generation photosensitizer, NPe6, for centrally located early lung cancers. Using human epidermoid carcinoma cells, A431 cells and the BCRP-overexpressing A431/BCRP cells, we examined the effects of BCRP expression on the effect of PDT by cell viability assay in vitro, and investigated the expression of BCRP by immunohistochemical analysis in 81 tumor samples obtained from patients with centrally located early lung cancers. The A431/BCRP cells were more resistant to Photofrin-PDT than A431 cells in vitro, and Fumitremorgin C, a specific inhibitor of BCRP, reversed the resistance. However, there was no significant difference in the antitumor effect of NPe6-PDT between these cells. All of the 81 centrally located early lung cancer lesions were BCRP-positive (2+, 45 lesions; 1+, 30 lesions) and all the patients were male and heavy smokers (>30 pack-years). The expression of BCRP significantly affected the efficacy of Photofrin-PDT in cancer lesions > or =10mm in diameter (P=0.04). On the other hand, NPe6-PDT exhibited a strong antitumor effect, regardless of the expression status of BCRP. Photofrin may be a substrate of BCRP and be pumped out from the cells, therefore, BCRP may be a molecular determinant of the outcome of Photofrin-PDT.


Lung Cancer | 2011

Klotho is a novel biomarker for good survival in resected large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung

Jitsuo Usuda; Shuji Ichinose; Taichirou Ishizumi; Keishi Ohtani; Tatsuya Inoue; Hisashi Saji; Masahiro Kakihana; Naohiro Kajiwara; Osamu Uchida; Masaharu Nomura; Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Tatsuo Ohira; Norihiko Ikeda

BACKGROUND In terms of prognosis, large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) differs distinctively from other non-small cell lung cancers, with the prognosis of LCNEC being poor, even for early-stage disease. Improvements in survival require a biomarker capable of defining a subset of patients destined to do poorly so that these patients can be targeted for additional therapies, including chemotherapy. In this study, we focused on the Klotho gene, which is an anti-aging gene known to be a potential tumor suppressor. We investigated whether the immunohistochemical expression of Klotho can predict survival patients with resected LCNEC. METHODS The histological characteristics of patients receiving an initial diagnosis of LCNEC (n=30) at Tokyo Medical University Hospital were retrospectively reviewed, and multiple variables including stage, lymphangioinvasion, lymph node status and the expression of Klotho as identified using an immunohistochemical analysis, were assessed. RESULTS Immunostaining for Klotho was mostly cytoplasmic, and Klotho expression was seen in 10 patients (33.3%) but not in 20 patients (66.7%). The expression of Klotho was significantly associated with a good outcome of resected patients with LCNEC and Klotho(-) was associated with increased LCNEC risk by multivariate analysis (hazard ratio 4.92, 95% confidence interval 1.04-23.24, p=0.044). Neither lymph node status nor lymphangioinvasion were significantly associated with a poor survival. However, among patients without lymph node metastasis or angioinvasion, the survival benefit of Klotho expression in the primary tumor was significantly higher, compared with that of patients without Klotho expression. CONCLUSION Klotho staining provides a new biomarker for a good outcome in patients with LCNEC, especially among patients without lymph node metastasis or lymphangioinvasion.


Respirology | 2008

Airway stenting for the treatment of laryngotracheal stenosis secondary to thyroid cancer

Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Mitsuhiro Kubota; Masae Yamada; Akihiko Suzuki; Jitsuo Usuda; Hiroshi Shibuya; Kuniharu Miyajima; Kiminori Sugino; Koichi Ito; Kinya Furukawa; Harubumi Kato

Background and objective:  Airway stenting can be a valuable therapeutic option for symptomatic airway stenosis, but its role in the palliation of advanced thyroid cancers invading the upper airway is unclear. This study examined the hypothesis that durable and replaceable silicone stents would give better results than self‐expanding metallic stents.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2008

Endoscopic tumor ablation for laryngotracheal intraluminal invasion secondary to advanced thyroid cancer

Hidemitsu Tsutsui; Jitsuo Usuda; Mitsuhiro Kubota; Masae Yamada; Akihiko Suzuki; Hiroshi Shibuya; Kuniharu Miyajima; Koichi Tanaka; Kiminori Sugino; Koichi Ito; Harubumi Kato

Conclusions. Endoscopic tumor ablation is a valuable option for inoperable postoperative laryngotracheal intraluminal invasion of well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC). Objectives. To investigate whether DTC invasion to the laryngotracheal mucosa can be controlled by ‘simple’ tumor ablation considering its relatively slow-growing nature. Patients and methods. Twenty-two consecutive patients underwent endoscopic tumor ablation caused by DTC for local control of intraluminal lesions with no significant extrinsic laryngotracheal compression in symptomatic or asymptomatic patients in whom radical operations were contraindicated. Debulking by Nd:YAG laser was followed by electrocoagulation and microwave coagulation for the residual tumor base. Results. The critical complication, post-treatment supraglottic stenosis, was managed by prophylactic minitracheotomy. During the follow-up period of up to 125 months, 6 of 22 patients died (median survival 50 months), mainly of lung metastases, but all had a patent airway at death. Post-surgical extraluminal lesion growth is indolent and since relapse of the intraluminal lesion is the main cause of symptoms, satisfactory local control could be obtained by re-ablation of the mucosal lesion every few years. Lesions requiring retreatment within 1 year after initial treatment usually have high-grade malignancy, causing extrinsic compression, and prognosis is unfavorable.


Archive | 2013

CQ50. Is Serum Thyroglobulin Measurement Useful as a Marker of Carcinoma Recurrence After Surgery

Minoru Fujimori; Hisato Hara; Hidemitsu Tsutsui

Thyroglobulin is a chief constituent of colloid in the thyroid follicles, which is vital for the synthesis of thyroid hormone. The serum thyroglobulin level of healthy people is around 30 ng/ml, but it decreases to nearly zero when thyroid tissue does not remain after total thyroidectomy. Whether thyroglobulin measurement is useful as a marker of recurrence after surgery for differentiated carcinoma is examined.

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Harubumi Kato

Tokyo Medical University

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Jitsuo Usuda

Tokyo Medical University

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Shuji Ichinose

Tokyo Medical University

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Kinya Furukawa

Tokyo Medical University

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Norihiko Ikeda

Tokyo Medical University

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Tatsuo Ohira

Tokyo Medical University

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Keishi Ohtani

Tokyo Medical University

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Sachio Maehara

Tokyo Medical University

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