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Dive into the research topics where Hiroaki Yamaoka is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroaki Yamaoka.


European Journal of Cancer | 1997

Telomerase activity in neuroblastoma: is it a prognostic indicator of clinical behaviour?

Eiso Hiyama; Keiko Hiyama; Kazuhiro Ohtsu; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Toru Ichikawa; Jerry W. Shay; Takashi Yokoyama

Neuroblastomas show remarkable biological heterogeneity, resulting in favourable prognosis or unfavourable prognosis due to aggressive growth despite multimodal therapy. Recently, we proposed that aggressive tumours express telomerase at a high level while the favourable tumours lack or have low telomerase expression. To evaluate the correlation between telomerase activity and other biological characteristics reported as prognostic markers (MYCN gene amplification, loss of heterogeneity (LOH) in the short arm of chromosome 1, trk-A expression, Ha-ras p21 expression, and DNA ploidy), we investigated these biological features in 105 untreated neuroblastomas. In these cases, 23 showed high telomerase activity, 78 showed low activity, and telomerase activity was undetectable in 4 cases. Most tumours with genetic alterations (MYCN amplification or 1p32 LOH) showed high telomerase activity. Most tumours with low or undetectable activity were aneuploid, and showed trk-A and Ha-ras expression. Three of the four tumours with undetectable telomerase activity regressed. In 2 of the tumours with low telomerase activity, the residual tumours maturated and showed repression of telomerase activity. Thus, the level of telomerase activity correlated with other genetic alterations and/or gene expression and may be a useful prognostic indicator in neuroblastoma.


The Lancet | 2008

Effectiveness of screening for neuroblastoma at 6 months of age: a retrospective population-based cohort study

Eiso Hiyama; Tomoko Iehara; Tohru Sugimoto; Masahiro Fukuzawa; Yutaka Hayashi; Fumiaki Sasaki; Masahiko Sugiyama; Satoshi Kondo; Akihiro Yoneda; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Tatsuro Tajiri; Kohei Akazawa; Megu Ohtaki

BACKGROUND In Japan, a nationwide programme between 1984 and 2003 screened all infants for urinary catecholamine metabolites as a marker for neuroblastoma. Before 1989, this was done by qualitative spot tests for vanillylmandelic acid in urine, and subsequently by quantitative assay with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). However, the Japanese government stopped the mass-screening programme in 2003, after reports that it did not reduce mortality due to neuroblastoma. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of the programme, by comparing the rates of incidence and mortality from neuroblastomas diagnosed before 6 years of age in three cohorts. METHODS We did a retrospective population-based cohort study on all children born between 1980 and 1998, except for a 2-year period from 1984. We divided these 22,289,695 children into three cohorts: children born before screening in 1980-83 (n=6,130,423); those born during qualitative screening in 1986-89 (n=5,290,412); and those born during quantitative screening 1990-98 (n=10,868,860). We used databases from hospitals, screening centres, and national cancer registries. Cases of neuroblastoma were followed up for a mean of 78.7 months. FINDINGS 21.56 cases of neuroblastoma per 100,000 births over 72 months were identified in the qualitatively screened group (relative risk [RR] 1.87, 95% CI 1.66-2.10), and 29.80 cases per 100,000 births over 72 months in the quantitatively screened group (RR 2.58, 2.33-2.86). The cumulative incidence of neuroblastoma in the prescreening cohort (11.56 cases per 100,000 births over 72 months) was lower than that in other cohorts (p<0.0001 for all comparisons), but more neuroblastomas were diagnosed after 24 months of age in this cohort (p=0.0002 for qualitative screening vs prescreening, p<0.0001 for quantitative screening vs prescreening). Cumulative mortality was lower in the qualitative screening (3.90 cases per 100,000 livebirths over 72 months) and quantitative screening cohorts (2.83 cases) than in the prescreening cohort (5.38 cases). Compared with the prescreening cohort, the relative risk of mortality was 0.73 (95% CI 0.58-0.90) for qualitative screening, and 0.53 (0.42-0.63) for quantitative screening. Mortality rates for both the qualitative and quantitative screening groups were lower than were those for the prescreening cohort (p=0.0041 for prescreening vs qualitative screening, p<0.0001 for prescreening vs quantitative screening). INTERPRETATION More infantile neuroblastomas were recorded in children who were screened for neuroblastoma at 6 months of age than in those who were not. The mortality rate from neuroblastoma in children who were screened at 6 months was lower than that in the prescreening cohort, especially in children screened by quantitative HPLC. Any new screening programme should aim to decrease mortality, but also to minimise overdiagnosis of tumours with favourable prognoses (eg, by screening children at 18 months).


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

The methylation status of RASSF1A promoter predicts responsiveness to chemotherapy and eventual cure in hepatoblastoma patients

Shohei Honda; Masayuki Haruta; Waka Sugawara; Fumiaki Sasaki; Miki Ohira; Tadashi Matsunaga; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Hiroshi Horie; Naomi Ohnuma; Akira Nakagawara; Eiso Hiyama; Satoru Todo; Yasuhiko Kaneko

Despite the progress of therapy, outcomes of advanced hepatoblastoma patients who are refractory to standard preoperative chemotherapy remain unsatisfactory. To improve the mortality rate, novel prognostic markers are needed for better therapy planning. We examined the methylation status of 13 candidate tumor suppressor genes in 20 hepatoblastoma tumors by conventional methylation‐specific PCR (MSP) and found hypermethylation in 3 of the 13 genes. We analyzed the methylation status of these 3 genes (RASSF1A, SOCS1 and CASP8) in 97 tumors and found hypermethylation in 30.9, 33.0 and 15.5%, respectively. Univariate analysis showed that only the methylation status of RASSF1A but not the other 2 genes predicted the outcome, and multivariate analysis showed a weak contribution of RASSF1A methylation to overall survival. Using quantitative MSP, we found RASSF1A methylation in 44.3% of the 97 tumors. CTNNB1 mutation was detected in 67.0% of the 97 tumors. While univariate analysis demonstrated RASSF1A methylation, CTNNB1 mutation and other clinicopathological variables as prognostic factors, multivariate analysis identified RASSF1A methylation (p = 0.043; relative risk 9.39) and the disease stage (p = 0.002; relative risk 7.67) but not CTNNB1 mutation as independent prognostic factors. In survival analysis of 33 patients in stage 3B or 4, patients with unmethylated tumor had better overall survival than those with methylated tumor (p = 0.035). RASSF1A methylation may be a promising molecular‐genetic marker to predict the treatment outcome and may be used to stratify patients when clinical trials are carried out.


British Journal of Cancer | 2004

High expression of telomerase is an independent prognostic indicator of poor outcome in hepatoblastoma

Eiso Hiyama; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Tadashi Matsunaga; Yoko Hayashi; Hisami Ando; Sachiyo Suita; Hiroshi Horie; Michio Kaneko; Fumiaki Sasaki; Kohei Hashizume; Akira Nakagawara; Naomi Ohnuma; Takashi Yokoyama

Telomerase, an enzyme related with cellular immortality, has been extensively studied in many kinds of malignant tumours for clinical diagnostic or prognostic utilities. Telomerase activity is mainly regulated by the expression of hTERT (human telomerase reverse transcriptase), which is a catalytic component of human telomerase. To evaluate whether the levels of hTERT mRNA provides a molecular marker of hepatoblastoma malignancy, we examined hTERT mRNA expression levels in the primary hepatoblastoma tissues by fluorescent RT–PCR using LightCycler technology and followed up the clinical outcomes in 63 patients listed in the Japanese Study Group of Pediatric Liver Tumor between 1991 and 2002. The hTERT mRNA expression was detected in 61 (96.8%) specimens and their expression levels ranged between 0.1/1000 and 745.1/1000 copies of PBGD gene that was used as an internal control. Among these cases, frozen 39 tumour samples and 14 adjacent noncancerous liver tissues were analysed for semiquantitative telomerase assay. In the 39 tumour samples, the levels of telomerase activity ranged between 0.11 and 2709 TPG and 12 (30.7%) had high telomerase activity (>100 TPG), whereas only nine of 14 noncancerous liver tissue samples showed telomerase activity which was less than 1.0 TPG. The levels of telomerase activity were significantly correlated with the levels of hTERT mRNA expression (P<0.001). The frequency of high hTERT mRNA expression and/or high telomerase activity did not significantly associate with the clinicopathological factors except for stage of disease. The prognosis of the patients with high hTERT mRNA expression was significantly worse than that of others (P<0.01), as was the patients with high telomerase activity (P<0.01). Multivariate analysis indicated that high levels of hTERT mRNA expression as well as telomerase activity are independent prognosis-predicting factors in patients with hepatoblastoma.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2004

Expression profiling of favorable and unfavorable neuroblastomas

Eiso Hiyama; Keiko Hiyama; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Taijiro Sueda; C. Patrik Reynolds; Takashi Yokoyama

Neuroblastomas show remarkable biological heterogeneity, resulting in favorable or unfavorable outcomes. To survey the differences in gene expression profiles between favorable and unfavorable neuroblastomas, we analyzed ten favorable neuroblastoma samples from patients whose tumors consequently regressed or matured and ten unfavorable tumor samples from patients who consequently died of disease using the microarray technique. In each sample, total RNA was labeled with Cy3 or Cy5 in reverse-trancriptase reaction and hybridized with our original microarray prepared with a cDNA library of human fetal brain. Microarray analysis revealed that 43 genes, including MYCN, hTERT, NME1 and cell cycle regulatory protein-coding genes, were highly expressed in unfavorable neuroblastomas, while another 80 genes were detected as highly expressed in favorable tumors, including neuronal differentiating genes and apoptotic inducing genes. Among favorable neuroblastoma samples, highly expressing genes in regressing tumors were different from those in maturing tumors. Expression profiling data revealed the existence of up-regulated and down-regulated gene clusters in favorable and unfavorable tumors. This cluster analysis is a powerful procedure to distinguish unfavorable tumors from favorable tumors as well as regressing tumors from maturing tumors among favorable tumors. The information obtained from expression profiling would clarify the key genes for cell growth, regression or maturation of neuroblastoma cells, and these genes will become diagnostic and therapeutic targets in human neuroblastoma in the future.


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 2001

Biological characteristics of neuroblastoma with partial deletion in the short arm of chromosome 1

Eiso Hiyama; Keiko Hiyama; Kazuhiro Ohtsu; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Ikuko Fukuba; Yuichiro Matsuura; Takashi Yokoyama

BACKGROUND Neuroblastoma shows remarkable heterogeneity, resulting in favorable and unfavorable outcomes. It is well known that almost all cases with MYCN amplification have a poor prognosis. We have previously reported that unfavorable tumors show high telomerase activity, whereas favorable tumors show low or nil activity. We also found that the unfavorable neuroblastoma often have a loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the MYCL locus. PROCEDURE To clarify the biological and clinical profiles of tumors with genetic abnormalities of the short arm of chromosome 1, we performed deletion mapping on 1p on 92 neuroblastoma tissues and corresponding noncancerous samples obtained from 92 cases for 24 micro- or minisatellite loci. RESULTS LOH was detected in at least one locus of 1p in 43 (47%) cases. All samples were classified into four groups according to the deleted pattern: interstitial deletion (group I, n = 20), short terminal deletion (group ST, n = 6), large terminal deletion (group LT, n = 17), and without detectable deletion (group N, n = 49). All group I cases, whose SRO (shortest region of overlap) was at 1p36.1-2, survived disease free, and none of them showed MYCN amplification or high telomerase activity except for one case. On the other hand, in group LT cases, who showed a large terminal deletion from D1S162 (1p32-pter), including the SRO of group 1, only 5 out of 17 have survived disease free, and 13 showed MYCN amplification or high telomerase activity. The six group ST cases showed small terminal deletion from 1p36.3 with modest prognosis, similar to the group N. CONCLUSIONS Thus, we propose three loci, 1p36.1-2, 1p32-34, and 1p36.3, as the candidate loci of neuroblastoma suppressor genes on chromosome 1p responsible for groups I, LT, and ST, respectively. Among them, the 1p32-34 locus may be associated with aggressiveness of tumor progression, possibly due to MYCN amplification and/or telomerase reactivation, while the remaining two loci may not.


Pediatrics International | 2002

High-dose chemotherapy in children with metastatic hepatoblastoma

Shin-Ichiro Nishimura; Takashi Sato; Naoto Fujita; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Eiso Hiyama; Takashi Yokoyama; Kazuhiro Ueda

Background : Despite the advent of effective chemotherapy, a poor prognosis has been reported for patients with metastatichepatoblastoma. To improve this prognosis, we conducted high‐dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow rescue in patients withmetastatic hepatoblastoma.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2009

Detection of CpG island hypermethylation of caspase-8 in neuroblastoma using an oligonucleotide array.

Arata Kamimatsuse; Kaoru Matsuura; Shogo Moriya; Ikuko Fukuba; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Emi Fukuda; Naomi Kamei; Keiko Hiyama; Taijiro Sueda; Eiso Hiyama

The caspase‐8 gene (CASP8) is frequently inactivated in unfavorable neuroblastomas through DNA methylation. The present study utilized oligoarrays to evaluate the methylation status of a CpG island located between exons 2 and 3 of caspase 8 in neuroblastomas.


Digestive Surgery | 2018

Clinical Characteristics and Surgical Treatment for Inguinal Endometriosis in Young Women of Reproductive Age

Hiroaki Niitsu; Hiroaki Tsumura; Tetsuya Kanehiro; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Hiroyuki Taogoshi; Naoki Murao

Aim: To study the characteristics and surgical treatment of inguinal endometriosis (IEM), which can occur in women of reproductive age. Methods: Patients who underwent groin surgery at the Hiroshima City Funairi Citizens Hospital between 2004 and 2017 were retrospectively examined. Patients with IEM were divided into 3 groups based on the site of occurrence as follows: at a hernia sac or hydrocele of Nuck’s canal (type I), round ligament (type II), or subcutaneous area (type III). Clinical characteristics were compared among groups. Results: Of 2,798 patients investigated, 28 were pathologically diagnosed as having IEM with 15, 10, and 3 classified as type I, II, and III respectively. All patients presented with a mass (median 20 mm) and/or bulge that mainly occurred at the right inguinal region. Sixteen patients presented with inguinal pain associated with menstruation. While the groups did not differ in terms of most clinical characteristics, the lack of a preoperative diagnosis of IEM occurred more frequently for type I than for types II and III. Conclusions: Because IEM-type I might be underdiagnosed preoperatively, complete resection of a hernia sac or hydrocele of Nuck’s canal with subsequent pathological examination is required for women of reproductive age with an inguinal disease.


British Journal of Cancer | 2008

Loss of imprinting of IGF2 correlates with hypermethylation of the H19 differentially methylated region in hepatoblastoma.

Shohei Honda; Y Arai; Masayuki Haruta; Fumiaki Sasaki; Miki Ohira; Hiroaki Yamaoka; Hiroshi Horie; Akira Nakagawara; Eiso Hiyama; Satoru Todo; Yoshiki Kaneko

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