Iori Tedokon
University of the Ryukyus
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Featured researches published by Iori Tedokon.
Internal Medicine | 2016
Kazuho Morichika; Takeaki Tomoyose; Taeko Hanashiro; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Keita Tamaki; Iori Tedokon; Yukiko Nishi; Sawako Nakachi; Kennosuke Karube; Takuya Fukushima; Takeharu Katoh; Koichi Ohshima; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Adult T cell leukemia / lymphoma (ATL) is one of the most aggressive hematological malignancies caused by human T-lymphotropic virus type-I (HTLV-1). Mogamulizumab is a new defucosylated humanized monoclonal antibody agent which targets C-C chemokine receptor type 4 (CCR4) expressed occasionally on the surface of ATL cells. However, adverse events such as drug eruptions have also been highlighted, at least in part, via the dysfunction of regulatory T cells (Tregs). We herein report a pronounced recurrence of systemic psoriasis vulgaris accompanied by the treatment of mogamulizumab in a patient with ATL. Pathological examinations may suggest a mechanistic link between the recurrence of autoinflammatory diseases and anti-CCR4 antibody therapies.
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2015
Keita Tamaki; Takeshi Kinjo; Hajime Aoyama; Takeaki Tomoyose; Sawako Nakachi; Taeko Hanashiro; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Iori Tedokon; Kazuho Morichika; Yukiko Nishi; Naoya Taira; Jiro Fujita; Naoki Yoshimi; Takuya Fukushima; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Abstract We report a case of fatal pneumonia and viremia due to human parainfluenza virus type 1 (HPIV-1) in a 65-year-old male patient with adult T-cell leukemia–lymphoma (ATL) treated with mogamulizumab, a brand-new therapeutic agent for ATL. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing viremia due to HPIV-1. After administering mogamulizumab, lymphocyte count in the blood was drastically decreased and the patient suffered from complicated infections including gram-negative bacterial sepsis, cytomegalovirus antigenemia and aspergillosis. Although these infections were successfully controlled by broad spectrum antimicrobial therapy, patchy ground-grass opacities in the both lungs were gradually worsened. He finally died due to acute respiratory failure. Since findings of the chest CT was consistent with typical patterns of viral pneumonia, we screened major respiratory viruses in the peripheral blood with multiplex PCR, and it turned out that RNA of HPIV-1 was positive. Although ATL cells were not detected in the autopsied lungs and a variety of other tissues, cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, which are commonly observed in RNA viral infection, were abundantly observed in the autopsied lung tissue. These findings suggest that mogamulizumab accomplished complete remission of ATL, while the chemotherapy-induced prolonged lymphopenia caused fatal pneumonia and viremia due to HPIV-1. As it has been well recognized that community respiratory viruses including HPIV-1 often cause fatal pneumonia in patients with leukemia, but also there is no specific treatment for HPIV-1, we have to enforce standard precautions especially when we treat leukemic patients with intensively immunosuppressive agents such as mogamulizumab.
Hematology | 2017
Sawako Nakachi; Masahiro Okada; Satoko Morishima; Yurika Agarie; Sakiko Kitamura; Sachie Uchibori; Shouhei Tomori; Taeko Hanashiro; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Keita Tamaki; Iori Tedokon; Kazuho Morichika; Yukiko Nishi; Takeaki Tomoyose; Kennosuke Karube; Takuya Fukushima; Sadayuki Murayama; Hiroaki Masuzaki
ABSTRACT Purpose: The aim was to explore undefined useful indices for clinically grading adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) using [18F] 2-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG) – positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT). Methods: A total of 28 patients with ATL (indolent, 9; aggressive, 19) were enrolled; all patients with aggressive ATL underwent FDG–PET/CT before chemotherapy. Patients with indolent ATL underwent FDG–PET/CT at the time of suspected disease progression and/or transformation; some received lymph node biopsy. The quantitative parameters maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmax), and mean and peak SUV, metabolic tumor volume (MTV), and volume-based total lesion glycolysis were calculated with the margin threshold as 25%, and 50% of the SUVmax for all lesions. Results: All parameters except for MTV-25% showed significant differences (P ≤ 0.05) in differentiating the aggressive type from the indolent type of ATL. Areas under the curve for receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis regarding the series of parameters investigated ranged from 0.75 to 0.92; this indicated relatively high accuracy in distinguishing the aggressive type from the indolent type. No malignant findings were detected in lymph node biopsies in indolent ATL patients with lymphadenopathy. Discussion: We performed evaluation of a line of parameters of FDG–PET, thereby demonstrating their significantly high accuracy for grading malignancy in ATL patients. In particular, low accumulation of FDG in indolent ATL patients with lymphadenopathy might predict that it is not a sign of disease transformation, but rather a reactive manifestation. Conclusion: FDG–PET/CT findings could be useful for clinically grading ATL. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT
Leukemia Research | 2017
Shugo Sakihama; Mineki Saito; Megumi Kuba-Miyara; Takeaki Tomoyose; Naoya Taira; Takashi Miyagi; Masaki Hayashi; Shigeko Kinjo; Sawako Nakachi; Iori Tedokon; Yukiko Nishi; Keita Tamaki; Kazuho Morichika; Jun-Nosuke Uchihara; Satoko Morishima; Kennosuke Karube; Yuetsu Tanaka; Hiroaki Masuzaki; Takuya Fukushima
Okinawa, comprising remote islands off the mainland of Japan, is an endemic area of human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-1), the causative virus of adult T-cell leukemia-lymphoma (ATL) and HTLV-1-associated myelopathy (HAM). We investigated the tax genotype of HTLV-1 among 29 HTLV-1 carriers, 74 ATL patients, and 33 HAM patients in Okinawa. The genotype distribution-60 (44%) taxA cases and 76 (56%) taxB cases-differed from that of a previous report from Kagoshima Prefecture in mainland Japan (taxA, 10%; taxB, 90%). A comparison of the clinical outcomes of 45 patients (taxA, 14; taxB, 31) with aggressive ATL revealed that the overall response and 1-year overall survival rates for taxA (50% and 35%, respectively) were lower than those for taxB (71% and 49%, respectively). In a multivariate analysis of two prognostic indices for aggressive ATL, Japan Clinical Oncology Group-Prognostic Index and Prognostic Index for acute and lymphoma ATL, with respect to age, performance status, corrected calcium, soluble interleukin-2 receptor, and tax genotype, the estimated hazard ratio of taxA compared with taxB was 2.68 (95% confidence interval, 0.87-8.25; P=0.086). Our results suggest that the tax genotype has clinical value as a prognostic factor for aggressive ATL.
Oncology Letters | 2018
Nobuyuki Maruyama; Kazuhide Nishihara; Toshiyuki Nakasone; Masanao Saio; Tessho Maruyama; Iori Tedokon; Tetsuya Ohira; Fumikazu Nimura; Akira Matayoshi; Ken‑Nosuke Karube; Naoki Yoshimi; Akira Arasaki
Second primary malignancy (SPM) is a severe issue for cancer survivors, particularly for osteosarcoma (OS) survivors. To date, the associations between subsequent SPM and OS have been well reported. Hematogenic and solid malignancies tend to occur following OS treatment. Reportedly, 2-[18F]-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is mainly used in OS patients for initial cancer staging, to evaluate the response of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and when recurrence or metastasis is clinically suspected. The present case report describes a 70-year-old man diagnosed with three primary malignancies: jaw OS, myelodysplastic syndrome and colorectal adenocarcinoma. To the best of our knowledge, this combination of malignancies has not been reported previously. Until now, there is no specific protocol of postoperative FDG-PET for OS patients. Few studies have described OS follow-up methods; therefore, there is no consensus on proper follow-up methods. In the present case report, the colorectal early-stage SPM was observed, without any symptoms, by FDG-PET/computed tomography. To avoid overlooking solid SPMs, it is suggested that FDG-PET should be performed in the long-term follow-up of OS patients.
Cancer Science | 2018
Keita Tamaki; Satoko Morishima; Shogo Nomura; Yukiko Nishi; Sawako Nakachi; Sakiko Kitamura; Sachie Uchibori; Shouhei Tomori; Taeko Hanashiro; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Iori Tedokon; Kazuho Morichika; Naoya Taira; Takeaki Tomoyose; Takashi Miyagi; Kaori Karimata; Masayo Ohama; Atsushi Yamanoha; Kazumitsu Tamaki; Masaki Hayashi; Jun-Nosuke Uchihara; Kazuiku Ohshiro; Yoshitaka Asakura; Megumi Kuba-Miyara; Kennosuke Karube; Takuya Fukushima; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Aggressive adult T‐cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) has an extremely poor prognosis and is hyperendemic in Okinawa, Japan. This study evaluated two prognostic indices (PIs) for aggressive ATL, the ATL‐PI and Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG)‐PI, in a cohort from Okinawa. The PIs were originally developed using two different Japanese cohorts that included few patients from Okinawa. The endpoint was overall survival (OS). Multivariable Cox regression analyses in the cohort of 433 patients revealed that all seven factors for calculating each PI were statistically significant prognostic predictors. Three‐year OS rates for ATL‐PI were 35.9% (low‐risk, n = 66), 10.4% (intermediate‐risk, n = 256), and 1.6% (high‐risk, n = 111), and those for JCOG‐PI were 22.4% (moderate‐risk, n = 176) and 5.3% (high‐risk, n = 257). The JCOG‐PI moderate‐risk group included both the ATL‐PI low‐ and intermediate‐risk groups. ATL‐PI more clearly identified the low‐risk patient subgroup than JCOG‐PI. To evaluate the external validity of the two PIs, we also assessed prognostic discriminability among 159 patients who loosely met the eligibility criteria of a previous clinical trial. Three‐year OS rates for ATL‐PI were 34.5% (low‐risk, n = 42), 9.2% (intermediate‐risk, n = 109), and 12.5% (high‐risk, n = 8). Those for JCOG‐PI were 22.4% (moderate‐risk, n = 95) and 7.6% (high‐risk, n = 64). The low‐risk ATL‐PI group had a better prognosis than the JCOG‐PI moderate‐risk group, suggesting that ATL‐PI would be more useful than JCOG‐PI for establishing and examining novel treatment strategies for ATL patients with a better prognosis. In addition, strongyloidiasis, previously suggested to be associated with ATL‐related deaths in Okinawa, was not a prognostic factor in this study.
International Journal of Hematology | 2017
Keita Tamaki; Satoko Morishima; Sawako Nakachi; Sakiko Kitamura; Sachie Uchibori; Shouhei Tomori; Taeko Hanashiro; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Iori Tedokon; Kazuho Morichika; Yukiko Nishi; Takeaki Tomoyose; Kennosuke Karube; Takuya Fukushima; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Here, we report a rare case of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with conspicuous manifestation of hematological abnormalities. At onset, the 52-year-old male patient showed systemic lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, severe autoimmune thrombocytopenia, and autoimmune neutropenia. Bone marrow examination and lymph node biopsy excluded the possibility of malignant lymphoma. Based on laboratory findings, he was finally diagnosed with combined autoimmune cytopenia coupled with SLE. Atypical clinical manifestations of SLE prompted us to explore the possibility of autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS). However, we did not detect an increased number of CD4−/CD8−, CD3+, TCRαβ+ double-negative T cells in the circulating blood or dysfunctional T cell apoptosis in the Fas/Fas ligand pathway due to mutations in the FAS, FASLG or CASP10 genes. Combined autoimmune cytopenia is a rare clinical entity that in some cases co-occurs with other autoimmune diseases. Given that most SLE patients presenting atypical hematological manifestations at an early stage subsequently exhibit typical systemic manifestations, the present case raises the possibility that initial hematological abnormalities may be signs of unexpected SLE manifestations.
Internal Medicine | 2015
Takeaki Tomoyose; Sawako Nakachi; Yukiko Nishi; Kazuho Morichika; Iori Tedokon; Keita Tamaki; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Taeko Hanashiro; Hironori Samura; Takuya Fukushima; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) sometimes causes opportunistic infections. A 53-year-old woman with systemic lymphadenopathies was diagnosed with ATL by inguinal lymph node biopsies and underwent oral chemotherapy. Two months later, high grade fever, lower abdominal pain and lymphadenopathy recurred. Computed tomography revealed the presence of lymphadenopathy with marked gas formation in the pelvic lesion. Blood cultures were suggestive of septic lymphadenitis by Bacteroides fragilis (BF). This represents the first demonstration of giant lymphadenitis with gas formation caused by BF in a patient with ATL. Notably, septic lymphadenitis is pivotal in the differential diagnosis of systemic lymphadenopathy in ATL.
International Journal of Hematology | 2016
Yukiko Nishi; Takuya Fukushima; Shogo Nomura; Takeaki Tomoyose; Sawako Nakachi; Kazuho Morichika; Iori Tedokon; Keita Tamaki; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Naoya Taira; Takashi Miyagi; Kaori Karimata; Masayo Ohama; Atsushi Yamanoha; Kazumitsu Tamaki; Masaki Hayashi; Hitoshi Arakaki; Jun-Nosuke Uchihara; Kazuiku Ohshiro; Yoshitaka Asakura; Megumi Kuba-Miyara; Kennosuke Karube; Hiroaki Masuzaki
Internal Medicine | 2014
Kazuho Morichika; Sawako Nakachi; Takeaki Tomoyose; Natsuki Shimabukuro; Keita Tamaki; Iori Tedokon; Yukiko Nishi; Nobuyuki Hyakuna; Takuya Fukushima; Hiroaki Masuzaki