Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maki Otsuka is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maki Otsuka.


Cancer | 1989

The prevalence of human T-cell leukemia virus type I infection in patients with hematologic and nonhematologic diseases in an adult T-cell leukemia-endemic area of Japan

Shuichi Hanada; Toshiaki Uematsu; Masahito Iwahashi; Koichiro Nomura; Atae Utsunomiya; Masahiko Kodama; Kazuaki Ishibashi; Ariyoshi Terada; Takeshi Saito; Torahiko Makino; Kimiharu Uozumi; Yasuo Kuwazuru; Maki Otsuka; Ryuji Harada; Shuji Hashimoto; Takehiko Sakurami

In order to clarify the prevalence of human T‐cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV‐I) infection in the Kagoshima district, Japan, a highly endemic area for HTLV‐I, antibodies for HTLV‐I (anti‐HTLV‐I) were examined in the sera of 6167 from healthy residents and patients with various hematologic and nonhematologic diseases. In healthy residents, including blood donors, the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I was 11.9% (562/4741 persons). The prevalence increased with age, and was significantly higher in females than in males (P < 0.01). The prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I in blood donors was 8.5%. In hematologic diseases, the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I was 98.3% in ATL, 28.9% in lymphoproliferative disorders except ATL, and 10.6% in myeloproliferative disorders. In nonhematologic diseases, the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I was shown to be 29.5% in pulmonary tuberculosis, 25.8% in leprosy, 33.8% in chronic renal failure (CRF), 21.9% in autoimmune diseases, and 47.8% in strongyloidiasis. The various diseases except myeloproliferative disorders had significantly higher prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I than healthy residents (P < 0.01 or 0.05). For autoimmune diseases, the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I in patients with blood transfusion (55.6%) was higher than in those without blood transfusion (8.7%), and healthy residents. In hemodialysis patients with CRF who had received blood transfusions the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I increased with the number of blood transfusions. Therefore, HTLV‐I transmission via blood transfusion would partially explain these high prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I. However, the prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I in hemodialysis patients with CRF was statistically higher than that in healthy residents, regardless of blood transfusion (P < 0.01). Furthermore, hemodialysis patients showed significantly higher prevalence of anti‐HTLV‐I than healthy residents, even at a younger age. Patients with pulmonary tuberculosis and leprosy showed the same results as hemodialysis patients. These results suggest the possibility that HTLV‐I infection has some relation not only to ATL but also to other diseases. Therefore, it seems very important to halt the spread of HTLV‐I transmission as soon as possible.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1995

Combination chemotherapy (RCM protocol: response-oriented cyclic multidrug protocol) for the acute or lymphoma type adult T-cell leukemia.

Kimiharu Uozumi; Shuichi Hanada; Nobuhito Ohno; Kenji Ishitsuka; Shigemi Shimotakahara; Maki Otsuka; Yoshiko Chyuman; Katsushi Nakahara; Taketsugu Takeshita; Yasuo Kuwazuru; Takeshi Saitov; Torahiko Makino; Masahito Iwahashi; Atae Utsunomiya; Terukatsu Arima

43 patients with the acute or lymphoma type ATL were treated with the new combination chemotherapy (RCM protocol: response-oriented cyclic multidrug protocol) between January 1989 and December 1991. Complete response (CR) and partial response (PR) were achieved in 20.9% and 65.1% of all treated patients respectively. The median duration of survival was 6.0 months. The survival duration of patients with a high serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) value (> or = 1,000 unit) and/or a poor performance status (PS) (PS 3 or 4) were also improved but not in patients with a severe leukocytosis (> or = 35,000/microliters). Toxicity was mild (grade 1 or 2) except hematologic toxicity in 4 patients (9.3%) and alopecia in one patient (2.3%). In spite of many patients with a poor PS (PS 3 or 4), our chemotherapeutic results are equal or superior to other previous reports. It seems that response-oriented chemotherapy is suitable for the ATL patients with poor prognostic factors. These results indicate that the RCM protocol is very useful as the first choice chemotherapy for the acute or lymphoma type ATL.


American Journal of Hematology | 1996

Serum dehydroepiandrosterone and DHEA-sulfate in patients with adult T-cell leukemia and human T-lymphotropic virus type I carriers

Kimiharu Uozumi; Toshiaki Uematsu; Maki Otsuka; Satoko Nakano; Yoshifusa Takatsuka; Masahito Iwahashi; Shuichi Hanada; Terukatsu Arima

The serum levels of dehydroeplandrosterone (DHEA) and DHEA‐sulfate (DHEA‐S) were determined by radioimmunoassay in 38 patients with adult T‐cell leukemia (ATL). Levels of serum DHEA and DHEA‐S were also measured in 60 human T‐lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV‐I) carriers, and did not differ from those in 60 healthy control subjects. Serum levels in patients with ATL were lower than those in the age‐ and sex‐matched healthy controls and in HTLV‐I carriers with statistical significance. Serum DHEA and DHEA‐S in male patients with acute and lymphoma‐type ATL were 1.06 ± 0.77 ng/ml and 245.8 ± 192.9 ng/ml, respectively. Levels in male patients with chronic and smoldering‐type ATL were 1.69 ± 0.68 ng/ml and 477.6 ± 251.5 ng/ml, respectively. Serum levels of DHEA and DHEA‐S in patients with acute and lymphoma‐type ATL were significantly lower than those in patients with chronic and smoldering‐type ATL (P < 0.05).


International Journal of Hematology | 2007

Two Cases of Secondary Acute Myeloid Leukemia Accompanying Adult T-Cell Leukemia/Lymphoma

Satsuki Owatari; Maki Otsuka; Kimiharu Uozumi; Taketsugu Takeshita; Shuichi Hanada

We identified 2 cases of secondary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) following adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) in patients who had previously received chemotherapy. Both cases were thought to represent therapy-related AML because the patients had previously received combination chemotherapy including epipodophyllotoxin, anthracycline, and alkylating agents for the ATL. The cases were diagnosed as AML M4 with eosinophilia and AML M2, with the chromosomal abnormalities inv(16)(p13q22) and t(8;21)(q22;q22), respectively. In our hospital, only these 2 cases of secondary AML accompanying ATL were identified among 90 cases of acute- or lymphoma-type ATL diagnosed from October 1999 to July 2006. The frequency of coexisting AML and ATL is lower than that reported for acute leukemia coexisting with other lymphoid malignancies. The low frequency of secondary leukemia with ATL may be associated with the short survival times of ATL patients.


Nephron | 1989

Adult T cell leukemia in hemodialysis patients from the Kagoshima district, an area in which human T cell leukemia virus type I is highly endemic.

Toshiaki Uematsu; Shuichi Hanada; Takeshi Saito; Maki Otsuka; Kazuo Komidori; Kazuya Osaki; Shinichiro Uemura; Hiroaki Ueda; Ryuji Harada; Shuji Hashimoto

We report 2 cases of adult T cell leukemia (ATL) from hemodialysis (HD) patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) in the Kagoshima district, an endemic area of human T cell leukemia virus type I(HTLV-I) in Japan. The positivity of antibodies to ATL-associated antigen(anti-ATLA) in HD patients, regardless of whether or not blood transfusions were given, has been higher than in healthy persons in the district (p less than 0.01). ATL is considered to break out from HTLV-I carriers. Further study should be conducted to clarify the relationship between HTLV-I infection and CRF, and moreover, attention should be directed not only to treatment of HD but accompanying ATL as well, particularly in HTLV-I-endemic areas.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1989

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for immune complex of HTLV-I

Kazuaki Ishibashi; Shuichi Hanada; Kimiharu Uozumi; Maki Otsuka; Takehiko Sakurami; Shuji Hashimoto

A sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for immune complexes of human T cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) was developed using monoclonal antibody (MoAb) 3G1 which recognizes a different epitope on HTLV-I to that with which natural human anti-HTLV-I antibody binds. The assay was capable of titrating artificial immune complexes not only at antigen-antibody equivalence but also at antibody excess. Although the antigen-antibody ratios could not be determined in the individual sera from patients with overt ATL, the level of immune complexes in three out of four sera was estimated to be 250 +/- 36 ng/ml. Immune complexes of HTLV-I could not be identified in sera obtained from one patient with overt ATL, three healthy HTLV-I carriers and three normal human controls.


British Journal of Haematology | 2018

Clinical significance of cutaneous adverse reaction to mogamulizumab in relapsed or refractory adult T-cell leukaemia-lymphoma

Masahito Tokunaga; Kentaro Yonekura; Daisuke Nakamura; Kouichi Haraguchi; Tomohisa Tabuchi; Satoshi Fujino; Maiko Hayashida; Kenichi Maekawa; Akihiko Arai; Nobuaki Nakano; Yuhei Kamada; Ayumu Kubota; Hirosaka Inoue; Satsuki Owatari; Shogo Takeuchi; Yoshifusa Takatsuka; Maki Otsuka; Shuichi Hanada; Tadashi Matsumoto; Makoto Yoshimitsu; Kenji Ishitsuka; Atae Utsunomiya

Altrock, P.M., Liu, L.L. & Michor, F. (2015) The mathematics of cancer: integrating quantitative models. Nature Reviews Cancer, 15, 730–745. Gerstung, M., Papaemmanuil, E. & Campbell, P.J. (2014) Subclonal variant calling with multiple samples and prior knowledge. Bioinformatics (Oxford, England), 30, 1198–1204. Gibson, C.J., Lindsley, R.C., Tchekmedyian, V., Mar, B.G., Shi, J., Jaiswal, S., Bosworth, A., Francisco, L., He, J., Bansal, A., Morgan, E.A., Lacasce, A.S., Freedman, A.S., Fisher, D.C., Jacobsen, E., Armand, P., Alyea, E.P., Koreth, J., Ho, V., Soiffer, R.J., Antin, J.H., Ritz, J., Nikiforow, S., Forman, S.J., Michor, F., Neuberg, D., Bhatia, R., Bhatia, S. & Ebert, B.L. (2017) Clonal hematopoiesis associated with adverse outcomes after autologous stem-cell transplantation for lymphoma. Journal of Clinical Oncology, JCO2016716712. [Epub ahead of print] Li, H. & Durbin, R. (2010) Fast and accurate longread alignment with Burrows-Wheeler transform. Bioinformatics (Oxford, England), 26, 589–595. Link, D.C. & Walter, M.J. (2016) ‘CHIP’ping away at clonal hematopoiesis. Leukemia, 30, 1633– 1635. McKerrell, T., Park, N., Moreno, T., Grove, C.S., Ponstingl, H., Stephens, J., Understanding Society Scientific Group, Crawley, C., Craig, J., Scott, M.A., Hodkinson, C., Baxter, J., Rad, R., Forsyth, D.R., Quail, M.A., Zeggini, E., Ouwehand, W., Varela, I. & Vassiliou, G.S. (2015) Leukemia-associated somatic mutations drive distinct patterns of age-related clonal hemopoiesis. Cell Reports, 10, 1239–1245. Rowland, J.H. & Bellizzi, K.M. (2014) Cancer survivorship issues: life after treatment and implications for an aging population. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 32, 2662–2668. Welch, J.S., Ley, T.J., Link, D.C., Miller, C.A., Larson, D.E., Koboldt, D.C., Wartman, L.D., Lamprecht, T.L., Liu, F., Xia, J., Kandoth, C., Fulton, R.S., McLellan, M.D., Dooling, D.J., Wallis, J.W., Chen, K., Harris, C.C., Schmidt, H.K., Kalicki-Veizer, J.M., Lu, C., Zhang, Q., Lin, L., O’Laughlin, M.D., McMichael, J.F., Delehaunty, K.D., Fulton, L.A., Magrini, V.J., McGrath, S.D., Demeter, R.T., Vickery, T.L., Hundal, J., Cook, L.L., Swift, G.W., Reed, J.P., Alldredge, P.A., Wylie, T.N., Walker, J.R., Watson, M.A., Heath, S.E., Shannon, W.D., Varghese, N., Nagarajan, R., Payton, J.E., Baty, J.D., Kulkarni, S., Klco, J.M., Tomasson, M.H., Westervelt, P., Walter, M.J., Graubert, T.A., DiPersio, J.F., Ding, L., Mardis, E.R. & Wilson, R.K. (2012) The origin and evolution of mutations in acute myeloid leukemia. Cell, 150, 264– 278. Young, A.L., Challen, G.A., Birmann, B.M. & Druley, T.E. (2016) Clonal haematopoiesis harbouring AML-associated mutations is ubiquitous in healthy adults. Nature Communications, 7, 12484. Zhu, L., Finkelstein, D., Gao, C., Shi, L., Wang, Y., Lopez-Terrada, D., Wang, K., Utley, S., Pounds, S., Neale, G., Ellison, D., Onar-Thomas, A. & Gilbertson, R.J. (2016) Multi-organ mapping of cancer risk. Cell, 166, 1132–1146.e7.


British Journal of Haematology | 1994

Expression of fos proto-oncogene product by monoclonal antibody FO-120 in smouldering adult T-cell leukaemia (ATL).

Masahito Iwahashi; Maki Otsuka; Shigemi Shimotakahara; Kimiharu Uozumi; Shuichi Hanada; Terukatsu Arima; Makoto Matsumoto

We investigated the expression of c‐fos gene product in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients with smouldering adult T‐cell leukaemia (ATL) and healthy human T‐lymphotropic virus type‐I (HTLV‐I) carriers by an immunofluorescence assay, using a mouse monoclonal antibody (FO‐120) specific for fos gene product. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells derived from healthy HTLV‐I carriers were rarely positive for FO‐120, less than 2% of the cells weakly reacted with FO‐120, whereas positive cells were detected in more than about 10% of cells from patients with smouldering ATL.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hematopathology | 2015

Acute Myeloid Leukemia Diagnosed 5 Years after Adult T-Cell Leukemia/Lymphoma.

Satsuki Owatari; Akihiko Arai; Tomoko Tsuruta; Koichi Haraguchi; Maki Otsuka; Shuichi Hanada

A case of secondary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) was identified following adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL), for which combination chemotherapy had been administered, including epipodophyllotoxin, anthracycline, and alkylating agents. AML with maturation was diagnosed by the cytological findings, cell surface markers, and chromosomal abnormalities. We previously reported two cases of AML accompanied by ATL. In this case of AML after chemotherapy for ATL, we considered that the AML was probably associated with previous chemotherapy for ATL. Although the ATL remained in remission, the therapy-related AML with complex chromosomal abnormalities proved resistant to chemotherapy, and the patient died from complications associated with AML.


International Journal of Hematology | 2014

Spontaneous regression of essential thrombocythemia with MPL mutation on menopause

Maki Otsuka; Shuichi Hanada; Kayo Arita; Haruhiko Ohashi

Essential thrombocythemia (ET) is a subtype of myeloproliferative neoplasms. Approximately half of the patients with ET harbor a gain-of-function mutation in the JAK2 gene (JAK2-V617F), a small percentage have mutations in codon 515 of MPL (thrombopoietin receptor) gene, and the rest have neither mutation. Pregnancy is a rare complication of ET, and it has been reported that the number of blood platelets falls with pregnancy in ET patients and the number of blood platelets increases again after a delivery and this phenomenon is observed in JAK2-V617F-positive and JAK2-V617F-negative patients. We report the first case of an ET patient with MPL mutations, whose platelet count improved with the onset of menopause, not pregnancy, and the MPL mutation also simultaneously disappeared.

Collaboration


Dive into the Maki Otsuka's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge