Jumpei Funai
Eli Lilly and Company
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Featured researches published by Jumpei Funai.
Clinical Lung Cancer | 2013
Seiji Niho; Kaoru Kubota; Keiji Nihei; Ikuo Sekine; Minako Sumi; Risa Sekiguchi; Jumpei Funai; Sotaro Enatsu; Yuichiro Ohe; Tomohide Tamura
BACKGROUND Pemetrexed has radiosensitizing potential when evaluated in vitro in combination with platinum-containing compounds and radiation. We determined the recommended dose (RD) of thoracic radiotherapy (TRT) with a concurrent chemotherapy combination of pemetrexed and cisplatin in Japanese patients with nonsquamous non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Eligible patients were histologically confirmed as having locally advanced nonsquamous NSCLC. Study treatment consisted of 2 phases: concurrent chemoradiation and consolidation. In the concurrent chemoradiation phase, all patients received pemetrexed 500 mg/m(2) plus cisplatin 75 mg/m(2) on day 1 of a 21-day interval for 3 cycles. The first 6 patients were given 60 Gy concurrently at level 1 dose (L1D). If dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) occurred in < 2 patients at L1D, radiation was escalated to 66 Gy (level 2 dose [L2D]). RESULTS Eighteen patients were treated and completed chemoradiotherapy; 12 completed the consolidation phase. In the concurrent chemoradiation phase, 1 patient experienced 2 DLTs [grade 3 anorexia and diarrhea] at L1D. Because no DLT was observed at L2D, it was determined to be the RD. Common toxicities ≥grade 3 were neutropenia and leukopenia. At L1D, 1 patient each experienced grade 2 and grade 3 pneumonitis, and 2 patients experienced grade 2 esophagitis. Six patients experienced grade 2 pneumonitis and 3 patients experienced grade 2 esophagitis at L2D. Fifteen patients achieved partial response (PR), 2 had stable disease (SD), and 1 had progressive disease (PD). CONCLUSION Expected toxicities from concurrent chemoradiation were not worsened with concurrent TRT at a total dose of 66 Gy combined with pemetrexed in Japanese patients with locally advanced (LA) nonsquamous NSCLC.
Journal of Pain Research | 2017
Hiroyuki Enomoto; Shinji Fujikoshi; Jumpei Funai; Nao Sasaki; Michael H. Ossipov; Toshinaga Tsuji; Levent Alev; Takahiro Ushida
Background Comorbid depression and depressive symptoms are common in patients with chronic low back pain (CLBP). Duloxetine is clinically effective in major depressive disorder and several chronic pain states, including CLBP. The objective of this post hoc meta-analysis was to assess direct and indirect analgesic efficacy of duloxetine for patients with CLBP in previous clinical trials. Methods Post hoc path analyses were conducted of 3 randomized, double-blind, clinical studies of patients receiving duloxetine or placebo for CLBP. The primary outcome measure for pain was the Brief Pain Inventory, average pain score. A secondary outcome measure, the Beck Depression Inventory-II, was used for depressive symptoms. The changes in score from baseline to endpoint were determined for each index. Path analyses were employed to calculate the proportion of analgesia that may be attributed to a direct effect of duloxetine on pain. Results A total of 851 patients (400 duloxetine and 451 placebo) were included in this analysis. Duloxetine significantly improved pain scores compared with placebo (p<0.001). It also significantly improved depressive scores compared with placebo (p=0.015). Path analyses showed that 91.1% of the analgesic effect of duloxetine could be attributed to a direct analgesic effect, and 8.9% to its antidepressant effect. Similar results were obtained when data were evaluated at weeks 4 and 7, and when patients were randomized to subgroups based on baseline pain scores, baseline depressive symptoms scores, and gender. Conclusion Duloxetine significantly improved pain in patients with CLBP. Path analyses results suggest that duloxetine produced analgesia mainly through mechanisms directly impacting pain modulation rather than lifting depressive symptoms. This effect was consistent across all subgroups tested.
Neurology and Clinical Neuroscience | 2017
Tomomi Nakamura; Shinji Fujikoshi; Jumpei Funai; Taka Matsumura
Solanezumab, an anti‐amyloid monoclonal antibody that binds soluble forms of amyloid, might have disease‐modifying properties that slow the progression of Alzheimers disease. Delayed‐start design was proposed as a method to show a disease‐modifying effect. In the global study, delayed‐start analysis suggested that treatment advantages obtained during the placebo‐controlled period in the mild subgroup of solanezumab‐treated patients were preserved at the primary time‐point (108 weeks).
Clinical Pediatric Endocrinology | 2017
Susumu Yokoya; Tomonobu Hasegawa; Keiichi Ozono; Hiroyuki Tanaka; Susumu Kanzaki; Toshiaki Tanaka; Kazuo Chihara; Nan Jia; Christopher J. Child; Katsuichiro Ihara; Jumpei Funai; Noriyuki Iwamoto; Yoshiki Seino
Abstract. The primary goal of the Genetics and Neuroendocrinology of Short Stature International Study (GeNeSIS) was to assess the safety and effectiveness of Humatrope®, a GH preparation, in the treatment of pediatric patients with short stature. We report our findings in the GH-treated Japanese pediatric population focusing on the incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and occurrence of neoplasms. A total of 2,345 Japanese patients were assessed for safety. During a mean observation period of 3.2 yr, T2D occurred in 3 patients (0.13%) and slowly progressive insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (SPIDDM) related to underlying mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) in 1 patient (0.04%). Neoplasms were reported in 13 patients (0.56%), including 1 patient with brain tumor (germinoma) and 5 with craniopharyngiomas (4 recurrences); the remainder were benign, typically dermatological, neoplasms. The incidence of diabetes mellitus determined in the study did not differ from previous reports in GH-treated pediatric patients, and there was no apparent increase in the risk of new neoplastic lesions or malignant tumors.
Pain | 2016
Eiji Harada; Hirofumi Tokuoka; Shinji Fujikoshi; Jumpei Funai; Madelaine M. Wohlreich; Michael H. Ossipov; Nakao Iwata
Abstract In treating Major Depressive Disorder with associated painful physical symptoms (PPS), the effect of duloxetine on PPS has been shown to decompose into a direct effect on PPS and an indirect effect on PPS via depressive symptoms (DS) improvement. To evaluate the changes in relative contributions of the direct and indirect effects over time, we analyzed pooled data from 3 randomized double-blind studies comparing duloxetine 60 mg/d with placebo in patients with major depressive disorder and PPS. Changes from baseline in Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale total and Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form average pain score were assessed over 8 weeks. Path analysis examined the (1) direct effect of treatment on PPS and/or indirect effect on PPS via DS improvement and (2) direct effect of treatment on DS and/or indirect effect on DS via PPS improvement. At week 1, the direct effect of duloxetine on PPS (75.3%) was greater than the indirect effect through DS improvement (24.7%) but became less (22.6%) than the indirect effect (77.4%) by week 8. Initially, the direct effect of duloxetine on PPS was markedly greater than its indirect effect, whereas later the indirect effect predominated. Conversely, at week 1, the direct effect of treatment on DS (46.4%) was less than the indirect effect (53.6%), and by week 8 it superseded (62.6%) the indirect effect (37.4%). Thus, duloxetine would relieve PPS directly in the initial phase and indirectly via improving DS in the later phase.
Endocrine Journal | 2015
Akira Shimatsu; Noriyuki Iwamoto; Toshiaki Tanaka; Akira Teramoto; Masanori Taketsuna; Katsuichiro Ihara; Jumpei Funai; Minoru Irie; Kazuo Chihara
In addition to impaired physical activity, adult GH deficiency (GHD) can decrease quality of life (QOL). Hence, assessment of QOL is important to evaluate the efficacy of GH replacement therapy. This study aimed to identify factors that may be predictive of long-term improvement in QOL among clinical/laboratory variables during GH replacement therapy. The analysis included 83 Japanese adults with GHD who participated in the Hypopituitary Control and Complications Study (HypoCCS). Correlations between the change from baseline in clinical/laboratory variables at 6 months and the change from baseline in Quality of life (Short-Form 36 [SF-36] component scores) at 12 months were examined. Unexpectedly, all component scores were negatively correlated with the change in fasting plasma glucose concentration (FPG) (physical component summary [PCS], r = -0.456; mental component summary [MCS], r = -0.523; role/social component summary [RCS], r = -0.433). The change in MCS was positively correlated with the change in insulin-like growth factor-1 standard deviation score (IGF-1 SDS) (r = 0.417). The change in PCS was positively correlated with the change in body fat (r = 0.551). The change in RCS was positively correlated with the change in waist circumference (r = 0.528). Short-term changes in several clinical/laboratory variables, most notably FPG and IGF-1 SDS, were correlated with long-term changes in QOL. The clinical importance of these correlations for predicting GH replacement treatment efficacy warrants further investigation.
Endocrine Journal | 2013
Akira Shimatsu; Shigeru Tai; Makoto Imori; Katsuichiro Ihara; Masanori Taketsuna; Jumpei Funai; Toshiaki Tanaka; Akira Teramoto; Minoru Irie; Kazuo Chihara
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2011
Kenjiro Aogi; Masayuki Yoshida; Yoshiaki Sagara; Shunji Kamigaki; Minoru Okazaki; Jumpei Funai; Toshio Fujimoto; Masakazu Toi; Toshiaki Saeki; Shigemitsu Takashima
Breast Cancer | 2012
Shintaro Takao; Yutaka Tokuda; Toshiaki Saeki; Jumpei Funai; Masami Ishii; Shigemitsu Takashima
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2013
Yutaka Fujiwara; Yuichi Ando; Toru Mukohara; Naomi Kiyota; Naoko Chayahara; Ayako Mitsuma; Masataka Sawaki; Robert L. Ilaria; P. Kellie Turner; Jumpei Funai; Kaijiro Maeda; Hironobu Minami