Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Masaya Nakauchi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Masaya Nakauchi.


Digestive Endoscopy | 2016

Robotic surgery for upper gastrointestinal cancer: Current status and future perspectives

Koichi Suda; Masaya Nakauchi; Kazuki Inaba; Yoshinori Ishida; Ichiro Uyama

Robotic surgery with the da Vinci Surgical System has been increasingly applied in a wide range of surgical specialties, especially in urology and gynecology. However, in the field of upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract, the da Vinci Surgical System has yet to be standard as a result of a lack of clear benefits in comparison with conventional minimally invasive surgery. We have been carrying out robotic gastrectomy and esophagectomy for operable patients with resectable upper GI malignancies since 2009, and have demonstrated the potential advantages of the use of the robot in possibly reducing postoperative local complications including pancreatic fistula following gastrectomy and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after esophagectomy, even though there have been a couple of problems to be solved including longer duration of operation and higher cost. The present review provides updates on robotic surgery for gastric and esophageal cancer based on our experience and review of the literature.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2016

Minimally invasive surgery for upper gastrointestinal cancer: Our experience and review of the literature

Koichi Suda; Masaya Nakauchi; Kazuki Inaba; Yoshinori Ishida; Ichiro Uyama

Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) for upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancer, characterized by minimal access, has been increasingly performed worldwide. It not only results in better cosmetic outcomes, but also reduces intraoperative blood loss and postoperative pain, leading to faster recovery; however, endoscopically enhanced anatomy and improved hemostasis via positive intracorporeal pressure generated by CO2 insufflation have not contributed to reduction in early postoperative complications or improvement in long-term outcomes. Since 1995, we have been actively using MIS for operable patients with resectable upper GI cancer and have developed stable and robust methodology in conducting totally laparoscopic gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer and prone thoracoscopic esophagectomy for esophageal cancer using novel technology including da Vinci Surgical System (DVSS). We have recently demonstrated that use of DVSS might reduce postoperative local complications including pancreatic fistula after gastrectomy and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after esophagectomy. In this article, we present the current status and future perspectives on MIS for gastric and esophageal cancer based on our experience and a review of the literature.


World Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2013

Hematogenous umbilical metastasis from colon cancer treated by palliative single-incision laparoscopic surgery

Tomohide Hori; Noriyuki Okada; Masaya Nakauchi; Shuji Hiramoto; Ayako Kikuchi-Mizota; Masahisa Kyogoku; Fumitaka Oike; Hidemitsu Sugimoto; Junya Tanaka; Yoshiki Morikami; Kaori Shigemoto; Toyotsugu Ota; Masanobu Kaneko; Masato Nakatsuji; Shunji Okae; Takahiro Tanaka; Daigo Gunji; Akira Yoshioka

Sister Mary Josephs nodule (SMJN) is a rare umbilical nodule that develops secondary to metastatic cancer. Primary malignancies are located in the abdomen or pelvis. Patients with SMJN have a poor prognosis. An 83-year-old woman presented to our hospital with a 1-month history of a rapidly enlarging umbilical mass. Endoscopic findings revealed advanced transverse colon cancer. computer tomography and fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography revealed tumors of the transverse colon, umbilicus, right inguinal lymph nodes, and left lung. The feeding arteries and drainage veins for the SMJN were the inferior epigastric vessels. Imaging findings of the left lung tumor allowed for identification of the primary lung cancer, and a diagnosis of advanced transverse colon cancer with SMJN and primary lung cancer was made. The patient underwent local resection of the SMNJ and subsequent single-site laparoscopic surgery involving right hemicolectomy and paracolic lymph node dissection. Intra-abdominal dissemination to the mesocolon was confirmed during surgery. Histopathologically, the transverse colon cancer was confirmed to be moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma. We suspect that SMJN may occur via a hematogenous pathway. Although chemotherapy for colon cancer and thoracoscopic surgery for the primary lung cancer were scheduled, the patient and her family desired home hospice. Seven months after surgery, she died of rapidly growing lung cancer.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2017

Robotic valvuloplastic esophagogastrostomy using double flap technique following proximal gastrectomy: technical aspects and short-term outcomes

Susumu Shibasaki; Koichi Suda; Masaya Nakauchi; Kenji Kikuchi; Shinichi Kadoya; Yoshinori Ishida; Kazuki Inaba; Ichiro Uyama

BackgroundValvuloplastic esophagogastrostomy by double flap technique (VEG-DFT) is a promising procedure to prevent reflux after proximal gastrectomy (PG), and is achieved by the burial of the abdominal esophagus into the gastric submucosa; however, laparoscopic VEG-DFT is technically demanding due to complicated suturing and ligation maneuvers. The present study was designed to determine the feasibility and safety of robotic VEG-DFT.MethodsAfter robotic PG, seromuscular flaps were extracorporeally created at the anterior wall of the remnant stomach through a small umbilical incision. Then, using a robot, the posterior wall of the esophagus was fixed to the cranial end of the mucosal window, and layer-to-layer sutures were placed between the anterior aspects of esophagus and the remnant stomach. Finally, the anastomosis was covered by seromuscular flaps. Short-term outcomes of 12 consecutive patients who underwent VEG-DFT between January 2014 and December 2015 were assessed.ResultsOperations were successfully completed using robotic assistance in all patients. Median operative, surgeon console, and anastomosis times were 406 (324–613 min), 267 (214–483), and 104 (76–186) min, respectively, and median estimated blood loss was 31 (5–130) ml. The first six cases were required to reach a learning plateau. Both mortality and morbidity rates within 30 days after surgery were 0%. Postoperative hospital stay was 10 (9–30) days. No postoperative reflux esophagitis was observed, whereas anastomotic stenosis, which required endoscopic balloon dilation, developed in three patients (25%) in postoperative month 2. There was a significant association between the total number of stitches used for VEG-DFT and anastomotic stenosis (p < 0.001).ConclusionsRobotic assistance may be useful for VEG-DFT with a short learning curve. Attention is required to prevent postoperative anastomotic stenosis possibly caused by an excessive number of stitches for esophagogastrostomy.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2016

Protocol for laparoscopic cholecystectomy: Is it rocket science?

Tomohide Hori; Fumitaka Oike; Hiroaki Furuyama; Takafumi Machimoto; Yoshio Kadokawa; Toshiyuki Hata; Shigeru Kato; Daiki Yasukawa; Yuki Aisu; Maho Sasaki; Yusuke Kimura; Yuichiro Takamatsu; Masato Naito; Masaya Nakauchi; Takahiro Tanaka; Daigo Gunji; Kiyokuni Nakamura; Kiyoko Sato; Masahiro Mizuno; Taku Iida; Shintaro Yagi; Shinji Uemoto; Tsunehiro Yoshimura

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) does not require advanced techniques, and its performance has therefore rapidly spread worldwide. However, the rate of biliary injuries has not decreased. The concept of the critical view of safety (CVS) was first documented two decades ago. Unexpected injuries are principally due to misidentification of human factors. The surgeon’s assumption is a major cause of misidentification, and a high level of experience alone is not sufficient for successful LC. We herein describe tips and pitfalls of LC in detail and discuss various technical considerations. Finally, based on a review of important papers and our own experience, we summarize the following mandatory protocol for safe LC: (1) consideration that a high level of experience alone is not enough; (2) recognition of the plateau involving the common hepatic duct and hepatic hilum; (3) blunt dissection until CVS exposure; (4) Calot’s triangle clearance in the overhead view; (5) Calot’s triangle clearance in the view from underneath; (6) dissection of the posterior right side of Calot’s triangle; (7) removal of the gallbladder body; and (8) positive CVS exposure. We believe that adherence to this protocol will ensure successful and beneficial LC worldwide, even in patients with inflammatory changes and rare anatomies.


Asian Journal of Endoscopic Surgery | 2017

Robotic surgery for the upper gastrointestinal tract: Current status and future perspectives: Robotic surgery for the upper GI tract

Masaya Nakauchi; Ichiro Uyama; Koichi Suda; Mohamed Mahran; Tetsuya Nakamura; Susumu Shibasaki; Kenji Kikuchi; Shinichi Kadoya; Kazuki Inaba

More than 4000 da Vinci Surgical Systems have been installed worldwide. Robotic surgery using the da Vinci Surgical System has been increasingly performed in the last decade, especially in urology and gynecology. The da Vinci Surgical System has not become standard in surgery of the upper gastrointestinal tract because of a lack of clear benefits in comparison with conventional minimally invasive surgery. We initiated robotic gastrectomy and esophagectomy for patients with upper gastrointestinal cancer in 2009, and we have demonstrated the potential advantages of the da Vinci Surgical System in reducing postoperative local complications after gastrectomy and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after esophagectomy. However, robotic surgery has the disadvantages of a longer operative time and higher costs than the conventional approach. In this review article, we present the current status of robotic surgery for gastric and esophageal cancer, as well as future perspectives on this approach, based on our experience and a review of the literature.


Asian Journal of Endoscopic Surgery | 2016

Delta-shaped anastomosis in totally robotic Billroth I gastrectomy: technical aspects and short-term outcomes.

Kenji Kikuchi; Koichi Suda; Masaya Nakauchi; Susumu Shibasaki; Kenichi Nakamura; Shuhei Kajiwara; Ai Goto; Kazuki Inaba; Yoshinori Ishida; Ichiro Uyama

Delta‐shaped anastomosis has been recognized as a method of intracorporeal Billroth I anastomosis in totally laparoscopic distal gastrectomy. However, the technical aspects and outcomes of the delta‐shaped anastomosis in totally robotic distal gastrectomy have never been reported.


World Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2013

Laparoscopic-assisted catheter insertion for continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis: A case report of simple technique for optimal placement.

Tomohide Hori; Masaya Nakauchi; Kazuhiro Nagao; Fumitaka Oike; Takahiro Tanaka; Daigo Gunji; Noriyuki Okada

A 40-year-old male underwent tube placement surgery for continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). A 2-cm skin incision was made, and the peritoneum was reflected enough to perform secure fixation. A swan-necked, double-felted silicone CAPD catheter was inserted, and the felt cuff was sutured to the peritoneum to avoid postoperative leakage. An adequate gradient for tube fixation to the abdominal wall was confirmed. The CAPD tube was passed through a subcutaneous tunnel. Aeroperitoneum was induced to confirm that there was no air leakage from the sites of CAPD insertion. Two trocars were placed, and we confirmed that the CAPD tube led to the rectovesical pouch. Tip position was reliably observed laparoscopically. Optimal patency of the CAPD tube was confirmed during surgery. Placement of CAPD catheters by laparoscopic-assisted surgery has clear advantages in simplicity, safety, flexibility, and certainty. Laparoscopic technique should be considered the first choice for CAPD tube insertion.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2018

Outermost layer-oriented medial approach for infrapyloric nodal dissection in laparoscopic distal gastrectomy

Susumu Shibasaki; Koichi Suda; Masaya Nakauchi; Tetsuya Nakamura; Shinichi Kadoya; Kenji Kikuchi; Kazuki Inaba; Ichiro Uyama

BackgroundBased on our experience of suprapancreatic nodal dissection in laparoscopic gastrectomy, we developed an outermost layer-oriented medial approach for infrapyloric nodal dissection. The objective of this single-institution retrospective study was to determine the feasibility, safety, and reproducibility of this novel and unique dissection procedure.MethodsThis approach can be performed in the same manner as suprapancreatic nodal dissection but by replacing the left gastric artery with the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA), the common hepatic artery with the anterior superior pancreaticoduodenal artery (ASPDA), and the splenic artery with the gastroduodenal artery. It comprises five steps: (1) mobilization of the transverse mesocolon along the prepancreatic membrane, (2) medial dissection along the dissectable layer between the pancreatic head and the dorsal side of the right gastroepiploic vein (RGEV), (3) division of the RGEV and determination of the lateral and cranial borders, (4) dissection along the outermost layer of the RGEA and ASPDA and transection of the infrapyloric artery and RGEA, and (5) transection of the duodenal bulb.ResultsThis novel method was applied in 112 patients who underwent laparoscopic distal gastrectomy from 2014 to 2015. The anatomical landmarks that we determined to appropriately identify the outermost layer were highly reproducible, and our novel procedure based on these landmarks was successfully completed in all cases, without any intraoperative complications. Furthermore, in all cases, no. 6 lymph nodes were fully and adequately dissected within the infrapyloric area anatomically defined in the Japanese Classification of Gastric Carcinoma ver. 14. Pancreatic fistula occurred only in 1.8% cases.ConclusionsThis novel outermost layer-oriented medial approach is a robust procedure that may help laparoscopic surgeons in performing safe and reproducible infrapyloric nodal dissection.


Esophagus | 2018

Robot-assisted mediastinoscopic esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: the first clinical series

Masaya Nakauchi; Ichiro Uyama; Koichi Suda; Susumu Shibasaki; Kenji Kikuchi; Shinichi Kadoya; Yoshinori Ishida; Kazuki Inaba

BackgroundRadical esophagectomy for esophageal cancer is associated with high morbidity, especially with pulmonary complications. Mediastinoscopic esophagectomy via a small left neck incision combined with the esophageal hiatus, without using transthoracic approach, has been reported to reduce pulmonary complication; however, from technical point of view, this approach using non-articulating, straight, long forceps is extremely challenging, especially in the middle mediastinal area. Its technical difficulties may be attenuated using da Vinci Surgical System. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of robot-assisted mediastinoscopic esophagectomy.MethodsRobot-assisted mediastinoscopic esophagectomy was performed in six patients between October 2016 and May 2017. Robotic esophageal mobilization with upper and middle mediastinal lymphadenectomy was performed via the three da Vinci Xi (Intuitive Surgical, Inc. Sunnyvale, CA) trocars placed on the 5-cm left cervical incision. Thereafter, the remaining part of radical esophagectomy was completed via a transhiatal approach.ResultsUpper and middle mediastinal lymphadenectomy was robotically completed via the transcervical approach in all cases without conversion to transthoracic approach. No postoperative complications (Clavien–Dindo classification grade ≥ III) were observed.ConclusionsRobot-assisted mediastinoscopic esophagectomy was technically feasible and safe. Use of da Vinci Surgical System may help attenuate technical difficulties in transcervical middle mediastinal lymph node dissection.

Collaboration


Dive into the Masaya Nakauchi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ichiro Uyama

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Koichi Suda

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kazuki Inaba

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kenji Kikuchi

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge