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Dive into the research topics where Keisuke Hanioka is active.

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Featured researches published by Keisuke Hanioka.


Urologia Internationalis | 2001

Role of Percutaneous Image-Guided Biopsy in the Evaluation of Renal Masses

Isao Hara; Hideaki Miyake; Shoji Hara; Soichi Arakawa; Keisuke Hanioka; Sadao Kamidono

Objective: The objective of the present study was to evaluate the indications, accuracy, complications and impact of image-guided percutaneous biopsy of renal masses. Materials and Methods: Between 1994 and 1999, percutaneous biopsies under ultrasonography or computerized tomography guidance were performed in 33 patients with renal mass (22 men and 11 women, mean age 57.5 years, range 21–88). We retrospectively analyzed the relationship between clinical and histopathological findings, and discuss the appropriateness of the indications for image-guided percutaneous biopsy in the diagnosis of renal masses. Results: The indications used in our institution were as follows: (1) clinical and radiological findings to suggest a diagnosis other than primary renal cell carcinoma (RCC) (n = 15); (2) suspicious lesions of RCC in multiple cystic renal masses (n = 7); (3) differentiation of transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis from RCC (n = 7); (4) differentiation of angiomyolipoma from RCC (n = 4). Sufficient amounts of tissues were obtained from all patients for pathological diagnosis. Among 33 patients, 21 (63.6%) were diagnosed positive for malignancy, and 15 underwent surgical intervention. The histopathological findings between percutaneous biopsy and surgically resected tissue were identical in 13 cases (86.7%). No patient developed major complications requiring surgical treatment. Conclusion: If performed under appropriate selection of patients, percutaneous image-guided biopsy is a safe, reliable and accurate method of managing suspicious and/or indeterminate renal mass, and may contribute to the selection of appropriate clinical management by avoiding unnecessary procedures.


Virchows Archiv | 1995

Thymoma: tumour type related to expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF), EGF-receptor, p53, v-erb B and ras p21

Yoshitake Hayashi; Chiho Obayashi; Keisuke Hanioka; Yukihiro Imai; Hiroshi Itoh; N. Ishii; K. Jinnai

As clinicopathological features may not be sufficient to predict the progression of thymoma, we have carried out what we believe to be the first immunohistochemical study describing the relationship between the different types of thymoma and the tumour stage, on the one hand, and the expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF), EGF-receptor (EGFR), p53, v-erb B and ras p21, on the other. The positive rates versus histological types and Masaokas clinical stages in the 47 cases were as follows: p53 (non-invasive thymoma: 41.7%; malignant thymoma category I: 82.4%; malignant thymoma category II: 83.3%), EGF (non-invasive thymoma: 4.2%; malignant thymoma category I: 11.8%; malignant thymoma category II: 33.3%) and EGFR (non-invasive thymoma: 8.3%; malignant thymoma category I: 35.3%; malignant thymoma category II: 66.7%); p53 (stages I and II: 51.7%; stages III and IV: 77.8%), EGF (stages I and II: 3.4%; stages III and IV: 22.2%) and EGFR (stages I and II: 13.8%; stages III and IV: 44.4%). These data suggest that p53 may be implicated in the initial stages of tumorigenesis and that increased expression of EGF and EGFR may play a role in thymoma progression.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Mucinous Carcinoma of the Breast: MRI Features of Pure and Mixed Forms with Histopathologic Correlation

Shuichi Monzawa; Masaki Yokokawa; Toshiko Sakuma; Shintaro Takao; Koichi Hirokaga; Keisuke Hanioka; Shuji Adachi

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to describe the MRI features of the pure and mixed forms of mucinous carcinoma of the breast and the histopathologic correlation. MATERIALS AND METHODS Seventeen pure and three mixed mucinous tumors of the breast were examined with T2-weighted MRI and triple-phase dynamic MRI. MR images were reviewed for evaluation of the signal intensity and enhancement patterns of tumors and for correlation with the histopathologic findings. RESULTS The presence of very high signal intensity on T2-weighted images was a common feature of pure and mixed mucinous tumors. Fourteen pure tumors and one mixed tumor had very high signal intensity, and three pure and two mixed tumors had very high signal intensity and isointensity on T2-weighted images. The enhancement pattern during the early phase varied with the cellularity of pure tumors and with the distribution of nonmucinous components in mixed tumors. Hypocellular pure mucinous tumors had a typical pattern of gradual enhancement. CONCLUSION Hypercellular pure mucinous tumors exhibit strong early enhancement and may be difficult to differentiate from mixed mucinous tumors. The distinction between the pure and mixed forms of mucinous carcinoma is important because mixed mucinous carcinoma more frequently undergoes lymph node metastasis and has a poorer prognosis than does pure mucinous carcinoma.


Annals of Nuclear Medicine | 2009

Diagnostic performance of fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomography of breast cancer in detecting axillary lymph node metastasis: comparison with ultrasonography and contrast-enhanced CT

Shuichi Monzawa; Shuji Adachi; Kayo Suzuki; Koichi Hirokaga; Shintaro Takao; Toshiko Sakuma; Keisuke Hanioka

PurposeThe purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) with fluorine-18–labeled 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (FDG) in comparison with that of ultrasonography and contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) in detecting axillary lymph node metastasis in patients with breast cancer.Materials and methodsFifty patients with invasive breast cancer were recruited. They had received no neoadjuvant chemotherapy and underwent PET/CT, ultrasonography and contrast-enhanced CT before mastectomy. The clinical stage was I in 34 patients, II in 15 patients, and III in one patient. The images of these modalities were interpreted in usual practice before surgery and the diagnostic reports were reviewed for analysis. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of each modality were obtained taking histopathological results of axillary lymph node dissection or sentinel lymph node biopsy as the reference standard.ResultsAxillary lymph node metastasis was confirmed in 15 of 50 patients by histopathological studies. PET/CT identified lymph node metastasis in three of these 15 patients. The overall sensitivity and specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of PET/CT in the diagnosis of axillary lymph node metastasis were 20, 97, 75, and 74%, and those of ultrasonography were 33, 94, 71, and 77% and those of contrast-enhanced CT were 27, 97, 80, and 76%, respectively.ConclusionsPET/CT showed poor sensitivity and high specificity in the detection of axillary lymph node metastasis of breast cancer. Diagnostic performance of PET/CT was not superior to that of ultrasonography and contrast-enhanced CT.


Pathology International | 1994

Expression of EGF, EGF-receptor, p53, v-erb B and ras p21 in colorectal neoplasms by immunostaining paraffin-embedded tissues.

Yoshitake Hayashi; Yekti W. Widjono; Kyosuke Ohta; Keisuke Hanioka; Chiho Obayashi; Kyoko Itoh; Yukihiro Imai; Hiroshi Itoh

Immunohistochemical studies were performed to clarify the significance of the expression or overexpression of epidermal growth factor (EGF), EGF‐receptor (EGFR), p53, v‐erb B, ras p21 in 23 cases each of tubular adenoma and adenocarcinoma. The expression of EGF, EGFR, p53, v‐erb B, and ras p21 in paraffin‐embedded tissues, from 46 patients with colorectal tumors (adenoma: 23 cases; 14 mild dysplasia, six moderate dysplasia, three severe dysplasia, adenocarcinoma: 23 cases; 17 well differentiated, two moderately differentiated, three poorly differentiated, one mucinous carcinoma was analyzed immunohistochemically using anti‐EGF, EGFR, p53, v‐erb B and ras p21 antibodies. The EGF and ras p21 tended to express more strongly in carcinoma cases than in the adenoma cases, and in severe and moderate dysplasia than in mild dysplasia (EGF: stained positive in five adenomas [21.74%] and 17 adenocarcinomas [73.91%]; ras p21: stained positive in six adenomas [26.09%] and 14 adenocarcinomas [60.87%]. The EGFR stained positive in two adenomas (8.70%) and two adenocarcinomas (8.70%). The p53 and v‐erb B showed positive staining only in the carcinoma cases (p53: stained positive in four cases [17.39%]; v‐erb B: stained positive in eight cases [34.78%]). This study suggests that these factors seem to have some role in the progression of colon neoplasms. It suggests that genetic alteration is not always equal to the overexpression of protein products, but that it reflects them well, and that the staining makes some contribution to differential diagnosis in colorectal neoplasms.


Human Pathology | 1989

Papillary hyperplasia of the pancreas.

Michio Shimizu; Hiroshi Itoh; Shuichi Okumura; Kimio Hashimoto; Keisuke Hanioka; Harumasa Ohyanagi; Masahiro Yamamoto; Yoshikazu Kuroda; Tatsuhiko Tanaka; Yoichi Saitoh

We report the first case of surgically resected pure papillary hyperplasia of the pancreas. Interestingly, it was not associated with chronic pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer. Histologic and immunohistochemical features are described, with a review of the literature on papillary hyperplasia of the pancreas.


Virchows Archiv | 1998

Differential expression of SHP2, a protein-tyrosine phosphatase with SRC homology-2 domains, in various types of renal tumour

Naoto Kuroda; Yoshitake Hayashi; Takashi Matozaki; Keisuke Hanioka; Akinobu Gotoh; Weiping Wang; Hiroya Uchida; Kimio Hashimoto; Yasuhiro Iwai; Kentaro Kawasaki; Yukihiro Imai; Masato Kasuga; Hiroshi Itoh

Abstract SHP2, a widely distributed protein-tyrosine phosphatase with src homology-2 (SH2) domains, is highly expressed in the brain and may play a role in synaptic communications or cellular proliferation. In this study, we examined SHP2 protein expression in 110 renal cell tumours of various histological subtypes, including clear, granular, papillary, chromophobe, collecting duct, and sarcomatoid-type renal cell carcinoma (RCC), and oncocytoma. SHP2 was expressed predominantly in normal distal tubules and collecting ducts, and positivity in various types of renal tumours was as follows: clear cell RCC, 0% (0/77 cases); granular, 7.7% (1/13); papillary, 50% (3/6); sarcomatoid, 0% (0/1); chromophobe, 85.7% (6/7); collecting duct carcinoma, 0% (0/2); oncocytoma, 100% (4/4). Clear and granular-type RCCs showed a very low but positive expression of SHP2. Chromophobe RCC and oncocytoma showed the highest rates and strongest intensities of SHP2 protein on immunostaining. SHP2 may serve as a powerful marker in detecting rare tumours. Estimates of its expression may be useful in histological diagnosis.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Papillary fibroelastoma of the left atrial appendage: echocardiographic findings

Takuro Tsukube; Keiji Ataka; Takahiro Taniguchi; Mitsuhiro Yokoyama; Keisuke Hanioka

Papillary fibroelastoma is a small and rare benign intracardiac tumor that most frequently arises from the valvular endocardium. We report a patient with acute myocardial infarction in whom a papillary fibroelastoma in the left atrial appendage was detected by a transesophageal echocardiography during evaluation of the myocardial infarction. The roles of transesophageal echocardiography and surgical intervention are discussed.


Pathology International | 1998

Ossifying renal tumor of infancy: The first Japanese case with long-term follow-up

Jishu Ito; Nobuo Shinohara; Tomohiko Koyanagi; Keisuke Hanioka

Jishu Ito1,5


Acta Radiologica | 2013

Incidental detection of clinically unexpected breast lesions by computed tomography

Shuichi Monzawa; Tetsuo Washio; Rie Yasuoka; Manabu Mitsuo; Yoichi Kadotani; Keisuke Hanioka

Background Increased use of computed tomography (CT) has resulted in greater detection of incidental breast lesions unrelated to the primary diagnostic inquiry. Purpose To investigate the morphology and clinical significance of breast abnormalities detected incidentally by conventional CT. Material and Methods A total of 2945 female patients underwent CT examinations of the body, including the chest, from May 2006 to April 2010. Two radiologists interpreted these CT scans independently and pointed out a mass or non-mass-like lesion as abnormalities in the breast. Patients who incidentally showed breast lesions on CT scans were identified by a computer-based search of the diagnostic reports and were enrolled in this study. The morphology and enhancement patterns of CT-detected breast lesions were evaluated according to BI-RADS-MRI. Results In total, 32 clinically unexpected abnormal breast lesions were found in 31 (1.1%) patients. Twenty-nine of the 32 lesions were detected by contrast-enhanced CT and three by unenhanced CT. Ten breast cancers were found in 10 patients (0.34%), which yielded the prevalence for malignancy of 31% (10/32). Invasive ductal carcinomas accounted for eight lesions, while two were ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS). Nine lesions were depicted as a mass and one DCIS was a non-mass-like lesion. Good morphological predictors of breast cancers for a mass were an irregular shape, a lobulated shape, and an irregular margin. Benign lesions accounted for 22 lesions from 21 patients (0.71%). Of these, 13 lesions in 13 patients were depicted as a mass and nine lesions in nine patients as a non-mass-like lesion. Conclusion Unexpected breast lesions can be identified as a mass or non-mass-like lesion on conventional chest CT scans. Among these, breast cancers that are not clinically apparent occur with considerable prevalence. We suggest that careful interpretation of the breast should be a routine part of CT examinations.

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Hiroshi Okada

Dokkyo Medical University

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