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Dive into the research topics where Hisashi Hatano is active.

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Featured researches published by Hisashi Hatano.


Cancer Research | 2005

IFN-β down-regulates the expression of DNA repair gene MGMT and sensitizes resistant glioma cells to temozolomide

Atsushi Natsume; Dai Ishii; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Takaya Tsuno; Hisashi Hatano; Masaaki Mizuno; Jun Yoshida

Alkylating agents, such as temozolomide, are among the most effective cytotoxic agents used for malignant gliomas, but responses remain very poor. The DNA repair protein O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) plays an important role in cellular resistance to alkylating agents. IFN-beta can act as a drug sensitizer, enhancing toxicity against a variety of neoplasias, and is widely used in combination with other antitumor agents such as nitrosoureas. Here, we show that IFN-beta sensitizes glioma cells that harbor the unmethylated MGMT promoter and are resistant to temozolomide. By means of oligonucleotide microarray and RNA interference, we reveal that the sensitizing effect of IFN-beta was possibly due to attenuation of MGMT expression via induction of the protein p53. Our study suggests that clinical efficacy of temozolomide might be improved by combination with IFN-beta using appropriate doses and schedules of administration.


Neuro-oncology | 2006

EGFR mutations in patients with brain metastases from lung cancer: Association with the efficacy of gefitinib

Shinji Shimato; Tetsuya Mitsudomi; Takayuki Kosaka; Yasushi Yatabe; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Masaaki Mizuno; Norimoto Nakahara; Hisashi Hatano; Atsushi Natsume; Dai Ishii; Jun Yoshida

Gefitinib--a specific inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-associated tyrosine kinase--has demonstrated efficacy in a subgroup of patients with non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) who fail conventional chemotherapy. It is also reported to have an antitumor effect in brain metastases from NSCLC. Additionally, EGFR mutations have shown a strong association with gefitinib sensitivity for NSCLC. Here, we assessed the efficacy of gefitinib in brain metastases from NSCLC and evaluated the association of this efficacy with EGFR mutations. We retrospectively reviewed eight cases in which patients were suffering from brain metastases before the initiation of gefitinib treatment. Brain tumor response could be evaluated by MRI in these patients; EGFR gene analyses were also available. We evaluated whether objective tumor response was observed after gefitinib treatment and assessed the efficacy of gefitinib as effective, noneffective, or not assessable in consideration of the influence of previous radiotherapy. Of the eight patients, the efficacy of gefitinib was assessed as effective in three and as noneffective in three. All three patients demonstrating effective efficacy had EGFR mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain (deletion mutation in two patients and point mutation in one patients), whereas none of the three patients demonstrating noneffective efficacy had EGFR mutations. Gefitinib appears to be effective in treating brain metastases in a subgroup of patients. Our data suggested a possible association between the efficacy of gefitinib in the treatment of brain metastases and EGFR mutations.


Neurosurgery | 2009

P16 PROMOTER METHYLATION IN THE SERUM AS A BASIS FOR THE MOLECULAR DIAGNOSIS OF GLIOMAS

Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Atsushi Natsume; Hisashi Hatano; Masazumi Fujii; Shinji Shimato; Motokazu Ito; Masasuke Ohno; Satoshi Ito; Masatoshi Ogura; Jun Yoshida

OBJECTIVEDeoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation of tumor origin can be detected in the serum/plasma of cancer patients. The aim of this study was to detect aberrant p16 promoter methylation as a potential diagnostic marker in the serum of patients with diffuse glioma to differentiate between gliomas and, particularly, to differentiate those in the brainstem from others; this was done by using the modified methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction technique. METHODSThe methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction was used to detect p16 methylation in the DNA extracted from 20 astrocytic tumors and 20 oligodendroglial tumors and the corresponding serum samples. Serum samples from 10 healthy individuals were used as controls. The association of p16 hypermethylation in the serum DNA of glioma patients with clinicopathological characteristics was analyzed. In addition, the serum DNA in 7 patients with a brainstem tumor (4 gliomas, 1 schwannoma, 1 cavernous angioma, and 1 ependymoma) was analyzed. RESULTSWe found p16 methylation in 12 (60%) of the 20 tissues with astrocytoma, but in only 1 of the tissues with oligodendroglioma. Similar methylations were detected in the serum of 9 (75%) of the 12 patients with aberrant methylation in the tumor tissues. No methylated p16 sequences were detected in the peripheral serum of the patients having tumors without these methylation changes or in the 10 healthy controls. Additionally, p16 promoter methylation in the serum was observed in all brainstem astrocytoma cases, but not in other cases. CONCLUSIONThis assay has potential for use as a serum-based molecular diagnosis technique for diffuse glioma.


Neurosurgery | 2007

Genetically heterogeneous glioblastoma recurring with disappearance of 1p/19q losses: case report.

Motokazu Ito; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Atsushi Natsume; Hisashi Hatano; Masazumi Fujii; Jun Yoshida

OBJECTIVE Intratumor heterogeneity is of great importance in many clinical aspects of glioma biology, including tumor grading, therapeutic response, and recurrence. Modifications in the genetic features of a specific primary tumor recurring after chemo- and radiotherapy are poorly understood. We report a recurrent glioblastoma case exhibiting loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 10q, while the primary tumor exhibited heterogeneity in the LOH status of 1p, 19q, and 10q. To determine the relationship between such modifications and heterogeneous chemosensitivity, primary cultured cells heterogeneously showing 1p/19q/10q losses were established from a surgical specimen of oligoastrocytoma and were treated with chemotherapeutic agents. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 46-year-old woman with a 1-month history of headache and visual disturbances presented to our institution. INTERVENTION A right temporoparietal craniotomy and gross total resection were performed. The pathological diagnosis was glioblastoma multiforme with oligodendroglial components. Whereas LOH on 10q was identified at all tumor sites, only the oligodendroglial components exhibited LOH on 1p and 19q. The tumor recurred 6 months after postoperative chemotherapy using interferon-β and ranimustine, as well as a course of fractionated external-beam radiotherapy (total dose, 60 Gy). Gene analysis revealed no 1p/19q allelic losses but only 10q LOH. CONCLUSION Intratumor heterogeneity might be explained by the presence of more than one subclone in the primary tumor. Here, the tumor cells exhibiting 1p/19q LOH with high chemosensitivity might have been killed by the adjuvant therapy and those exhibiting 10q LOH with chemoresistance recurred. This study and our preliminary laboratory findings might suggest an approach to brain tumor physiology, diagnosis, and therapy.


Neurosurgery | 2007

Genetically Heterogeneous Glioblastoma Recurring with Disappearance of 1p/19q Losses

Motokazu Ito; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Atsushi Natsume; Hisashi Hatano; Masazumi Fujii; Jun Yoshida

OBJECTIVE Intratumor heterogeneity is of great importance in many clinical aspects of glioma biology, including tumor grading, therapeutic response, and recurrence. Modifications in the genetic features of a specific primary tumor recurring after chemo- and radiotherapy are poorly understood. We report a recurrent glioblastoma case exhibiting loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 10q, while the primary tumor exhibited heterogeneity in the LOH status of 1p, 19q, and 10q. To determine the relationship between such modifications and heterogeneous chemosensitivity, primary cultured cells heterogeneously showing 1p/19q/10q losses were established from a surgical specimen of oligoastrocytoma and were treated with chemotherapeutic agents. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 46-year-old woman with a 1-month history of headache and visual disturbances presented to our institution. INTERVENTION A right temporoparietal craniotomy and gross total resection were performed. The pathological diagnosis was glioblastoma multiforme with oligodendroglial components. Whereas LOH on 10q was identified at all tumor sites, only the oligodendroglial components exhibited LOH on 1p and 19q. The tumor recurred 6 months after postoperative chemotherapy using interferon-β and ranimustine, as well as a course of fractionated external-beam radiotherapy (total dose, 60 Gy). Gene analysis revealed no 1p/19q allelic losses but only 10q LOH. CONCLUSION Intratumor heterogeneity might be explained by the presence of more than one subclone in the primary tumor. Here, the tumor cells exhibiting 1p/19q LOH with high chemosensitivity might have been killed by the adjuvant therapy and those exhibiting 10q LOH with chemoresistance recurred. This study and our preliminary laboratory findings might suggest an approach to brain tumor physiology, diagnosis, and therapy.


Neurosurgery | 2007

Genetically heterogeneous glioblastoma recurring with disappearance of 1p/19q losses : Case report. Commentary

Motokazu Ito; Atsushi Natsume; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Hisashi Hatano; Masazumi Fujii; Jun Yoshida; Linda M. Liau; Michael A. Vogelbaum; Thomas C. Chen

OBJECTIVE Intratumor heterogeneity is of great importance in many clinical aspects of glioma biology, including tumor grading, therapeutic response, and recurrence. Modifications in the genetic features of a specific primary tumor recurring after chemo- and radiotherapy are poorly understood. We report a recurrent glioblastoma case exhibiting loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 10q, while the primary tumor exhibited heterogeneity in the LOH status of 1p, 19q, and 10q. To determine the relationship between such modifications and heterogeneous chemosensitivity, primary cultured cells heterogeneously showing 1p/19q/10q losses were established from a surgical specimen of oligoastrocytoma and were treated with chemotherapeutic agents. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 46-year-old woman with a 1-month history of headache and visual disturbances presented to our institution. INTERVENTION A right temporoparietal craniotomy and gross total resection were performed. The pathological diagnosis was glioblastoma multiforme with oligodendroglial components. Whereas LOH on 10q was identified at all tumor sites, only the oligodendroglial components exhibited LOH on 1p and 19q. The tumor recurred 6 months after postoperative chemotherapy using interferon-β and ranimustine, as well as a course of fractionated external-beam radiotherapy (total dose, 60 Gy). Gene analysis revealed no 1p/19q allelic losses but only 10q LOH. CONCLUSION Intratumor heterogeneity might be explained by the presence of more than one subclone in the primary tumor. Here, the tumor cells exhibiting 1p/19q LOH with high chemosensitivity might have been killed by the adjuvant therapy and those exhibiting 10q LOH with chemoresistance recurred. This study and our preliminary laboratory findings might suggest an approach to brain tumor physiology, diagnosis, and therapy.


Archive | 2006

Human Gene Therapy for Malignant Gliomas

Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Jun Yoshida; Masaaki Mizuno; Masazumi Fujii; Yasukazu Kajita; Norimoto Nakahara; Hisashi Hatano

In the recent years, the prognosis of brain tumor patients has dramatically improved due to recent advances in neurosurgical operative procedures, which are included microneurosurgical techniques, development of intraoperative computer-assisted neuronavigation system (like as Neuronavigator), functional mapping, and neuro monitoring system during operative procedure. Furthermore, development of neuroendoscopic surgery, intravascular surgery and radiosurgery are also assisted the improvement of survival and/or functional prognostic rate of brain tumor patients. According to a report by the Committee of Brain Tumor Registry of Japan, the ten year survival rate of patients with benign brain tumors (meningioma, neurinoma and pituitary adenoma) is more than 95%. In contrast, patients with glioma (which constitute 33% of primary brain tumor cases) still have a poor prognosis, especially in the case of malignant, which is included anaplastic astrocytoma and glioblastoma. This poor prognosis is related to the fact that malignant glioma cells aggressively infiltrate into normal brain tissues, making total removal of the tumor impossible. The median survival time of glioblastoma patients is less than two years, despite multimodality treatment with extensive surgical resection and adjuvant therapies using radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hyperthermia and so on. In order to overcome this formidable neoplasm, the effectiveness of molecular biology using gene therapy has been investigated since 1992 in U.S.A. and 2000 in Japan. In this paper, molecular genetic studies and current state of gene therapy for brain tumors is described.


Neurologia Medico-chirurgica | 2007

Efficacy of temozolomide is correlated with 1p loss and methylation of the deoxyribonucleic acid repair gene MGMT in malignant gliomas.

Dai Ishii; Atsushi Natsume; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Hisashi Hatano; Yoshio Asano; Hiroki Takeuchi; Shinji Shimato; Motokazu Ito; Masazumi Fujii; Jun Yoshida


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005

Intraventricular chordoid meningioma presenting with Castleman disease due to overproduction of interleukin-6. Case report.

Toru Arima; Atsushi Natsume; Hisashi Hatano; Norimoto Nakahara; Mitsugu Fujita; Dai Ishii; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Manabu Doyu; Tetsuro Nagasaka; Jun Yoshida


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005

Multicentric atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors occurring in the eye and fourth ventricle of an infant: Case report

Mitsugu Fujita; Miho Sato; Makoto Nakamura; Kazuko Kudo; Tetsuro Nagasaka; Masaaki Mizuno; Emi Amano; Yoko Okamoto; Yoshihiro Hotta; Hisashi Hatano; Norimoto Nakahara; Toshihiko Wakabayashi; Jun Yoshida

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Masazumi Fujii

Fukushima Medical University

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