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Featured researches published by Meinoshin Okumura.


Cancer | 2002

The World Health Organization histologic classification system reflects the oncologic behavior of thymoma: a clinical study of 273 patients.

Meinoshin Okumura; Mitsunori Ohta; Hisashi Tateyama; Katsuhiro Nakagawa; Akihide Matsumura; Hajime Maeda; Hiroto Tada; Tadaaki Eimoto; Hikaru Matsuda; Akira Masaoka

Although the histologic classification of thymic epithelial tumors has been confusing and controversial, an agreement on the universal classification system for thymic epithelial tumors was achieved by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1999. The authors previously reported that the WHO histologic classification system reflects invasiveness and immunologic function of thymic epithelial tumors. In this subsequent study, they examined the prognostic significance of this classification system.


Modern Pathology | 2006

Immunohistochemical detection of WT1 protein in a variety of cancer cells

Shin-ichi Nakatsuka; Yusuke Oji; Tetsuya Horiuchi; Takayoshi Kanda; Michio Kitagawa; Tamotsu Takeuchi; Kiyoshi Kawano; Yuko Kuwae; Akira Yamauchi; Meinoshin Okumura; Yayoi Kitamura; Yoshihiro Oka; Ichiro Kawase; Haruo Sugiyama; Katsuyuki Aozasa

WT1 was first identified as a tumor suppressor involved in the development of Wilms’ tumor. Recently, oncogenic properties of WT1 have been demonstrated in various hematological malignancies and solid tumors. Because WT1 has been identified as a molecular target for cancer immunotherapy, immunohistochemical detection of WT1 in tumor cells has become an essential part of routine practice. In the present study, the expression of WT1 was examined in 494 cases of human cancers, including tumors of the gastrointestinal and pancreatobiliary system, urinary tract, male and female genital organs, breast, lung, brain, skin, soft tissues and bone by immunohistochemistry using polyclonal (C-19) and monoclonal (6F-H2) antibodies against WT1 protein. Staining for C-19 and 6F-H2 was found in 35–100 and 5–88% of the cases of each kind of tumor, respectively. WT1-positive tumors included tumor of the stomach, prostate, and biliary and urinary systems, and malignant melanomas. A majority of the positive cases showed diffuse or granular staining in the cytoplasm, whereas ovarian tumors and desmoplastic small round cell tumors frequently showed nuclear staining. Glioblastomas, some of soft tissue sarcomas, osteosarcomas, and malignant melanomas of the skin showed extremely strong cytoplasmic staining as compared with other tumors. Western blot analysis showed that WT1 protein was predominantly expressed in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells in two cases of lung adenocarcinoma, supporting the intracytoplasmic staining for WT1 using immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemical detection with routinely processed histologic sections could provide meaningful information on the expression of WT1 in cancer cells.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2011

Japanese lung cancer registry study of 11,663 surgical cases in 2004: demographic and prognosis changes over decade.

Noriyoshi Sawabata; Etsuo Miyaoka; Hisao Asamura; Yoichi Nakanishi; Kenji Eguchi; Masaki Mori; Hiroaki Nomori; Yoshitaka Fujii; Meinoshin Okumura; Kohei Yokoi

Background: The Japan Lung Cancer Society, the Japanese Association for Chest Surgery, and the Japanese Respiratory Society jointly established the Japanese Joint Committee for Lung Cancer Registration, which has regularly conducted lung cancer registries for surgical cases in 5-year periods. We analyzed data obtained in these registries to reveal the most recent surgical outcomes and trends related to lung cancer surgery in Japan. Methods: Using data from the registry in 2010 for cases of surgery performed in 2004, demographics, surgical results, and stage-specific prognoses were analyzed. In addition, trends for those parameters over 10 years were assessed. Results: The 5-year survival rate for all cases (n = 11,663, 7369 males, mean age 66.7 years) was 69.6%. The 5-year survival rates by c-stage and p-stage were as follow: IA, 82.0% (n = 6295) and 86.8% (n = 4978); IB, 66.8% (n = 2339) and 73.9% (n = 2552); IIA, 54.5% (n = 819) and 61.6% (n = 941); IIB, 46.4% (n = 648) and 49.8% (n = 848); IIIA, 42.8% (n = 1216) and 40.9% (n = 1804); IIIB, 40.3% (n = 90) and 27.8% (n = 106); and IV, 31.4% (n = 256) and 27.9% (n = 434), respectively. The percentages of female patients, cases with adenocarcinoma, stage I or II disease, and tumors sized less than 2 cm were increased, while those of operative and hospital deaths were decreased. Furthermore, the prognoses of all cases and cases in each stage improved over the decade. Conclusion: In Japanese cases of lung cancer surgery, demographics, surgical results, and stage-specific prognoses changed over the 10-year study period, while the 5-year survival rate for surgical cases improved to 69.6% in 2004.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2001

Clinical and functional significance of WHO classification on human thymic epithelial neoplasms: a study of 146 consecutive tumors.

Meinoshin Okumura; Shinichiro Miyoshi; Yoshitaka Fujii; Yukiyasu Takeuchi; Hiroyuki Shiono; Masayoshi Inoue; Kenjirou Fukuhara; Yoshihisa Kadota; Hisashi Tateyama; Tadaaki Eimoto; Hikaru Matsuda

We examined the clinical and functional significance of histologic classification of thymic epithelial neoplasms proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO), based on an analysis of 146 consecutive tumors derived from 141 patients and 47 normal thymuses derived from children ranging in age from 1 to 9 years. Invasive tumors were seen in 12.5%, 38.6%, 40.0%, 69.4%, 80.0%, and 100% of type A, AB, B1, B2, B3, and C primary tumors, respectively. All of six recurrent or metastatic lesions were type B2 tumors. Myasthenia gravis was associated in 0%, 6.8%, 40.0%, 55.6%, 10.0%, and 0% in patients with type A, AB, B1, B2, B3, and C tumors, respectively. The average number (×106) of tumor-associated CD4+CD8+ cells present in 1 g of tumor tissue was 1.5, 391.1, 1041.7, 333.9, 24.5, and 0.2 in type A, AB, B1, B2, B3, and C, respectively, and it was 1168.2 in the normal thymuses. Thus, type B1 tumor retained the function to induce CD4+CD8+ double-positive cells at a level comparable to that of the normal thymic cortical epithelial cells, followed by type AB and type B2 tumors. Type A and B3 tumors had this function at a barely detectable level, and type C tumor was nonfunctional. WHO histologic classification was shown to reflect the clinical features and the T-cell-inducing function of thymic epithelial tumors.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

EGFR Mutation Status in Japanese Lung Cancer Patients: Genotyping Analysis Using LightCycler

Hidefumi Sasaki; Katsuhiko Endo; Akimitsu Konishi; Minoru Takada; Masaaki Kawahara; Keiji Iuchi; Akihide Matsumura; Meinoshin Okumura; Hisaichi Tanaka; Tomoya Kawaguchi; Toshiki Shimizu; Motoki Yano; Ichiro Fukai; Yoshitaka Fujii

Purpose: Recently, somatic mutations of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene were found in ∼25% of Japanese lung cancer patients. These EGFR mutations are reported to be correlated with clinical response to gefitinib therapy. However, DNA sequencing using the PCR methods described to date is time-consuming and requires significant quantities of DNA; thus, this existing approach is not suitable for a routine pretherapeutic screening program. Experimental Design: We have genotyped EGFR mutation status in Japanese lung cancer patients, including 102 surgically treated lung cancer cases from Nagoya City University Hospital and 16 gefitinib-treated lung cancer cases from Kinki-chuo Chest Medical Center. The presence or absence of three common EGFR mutations were analyzed by real-time quantitative PCR with mutation-specific sensor and anchor probes. Results: In exon 21, EGFR mutations (CTG → CGG; L858R) were found from 8 of 102 patients from Nagoya and 1 of 16 from Kinki. We also detected the deletion mutations in exon 19 from 7 of 102 patients from Nagoya (all were deletion type 1a) and 4 of 16 patients from Kinki (one was type 1a and three were type 1b). In exon 18, one example of G719S mutation was found from both Nagoya and Kinki. The L858R mutation was significantly correlated with gender (women versus men, P < 0.0001), Brinkman index (600 ≤ versus 600>, P = 0.001), pathologic subtypes (adenocarcinoma versus nonadenocarcinoma, P = 0.007), and differentiation status of the lung cancers (well versus moderately or poorly, P = 0.0439), whereas the deletion mutants were not. EGFR gene status, including the type of EGFR somatic mutation, was correlated with sensitivity to gefitinib therapy. For example, some of our gefitinib-responsive patients had L858R or deletion type 1a mutations. On the other hand, one of our gefitinib-resistant patients had a G719S mutation. Conclusions: Using the LightCycler PCR assay, the EGFR L858R mutation status might correlate with gender, pathologic subtypes, and gefitinib sensitivity of lung cancers. However, further genotyping studies are needed to confirm the mechanisms of EGFR mutations for the sensitivity or resistance of gefitinib therapy for the lung cancer.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1999

Results of surgical treatment of thymomas with special reference to the involved organs.

Meinoshin Okumura; Shinichiro Miyoshi; Yukiyasu Takeuchi; Hyung-Eng Yoon; Masato Minami; Shin-ichi Takeda; Yoshitaka Fujii; Kazuya Nakahara; Hikaru Matsuda

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study is to clarify the significance of the particular involved organ as a prognostic factor and its relation to other previously reported factors. METHODS The prognoses of 194 consecutive patients with thymoma who had undergone complete or subtotal resection were reviewed retrospectively. Survival was evaluated as actuarial freedom from tumor death. Analysis of prognostic factors was performed by the Kaplan-Meier method with the log rank test and Coxs proportional hazards model. RESULTS The Masaoka staging system and involvement of the great vessels were the independent prognostic factors in the entire study group; age, sex, histologic subtype, completeness of resection, association of myasthenia gravis, or involvement of other organs were not factors. The 10-year and 20-year survivals were 99% and 90% in stage I, 94% and 90% in stage II, 88% and 56% in stage III, 30% and 15% in stage IVa, 0% and 0% in stage IVb, 93% and 83% in the absence of involvement of the great vessels, and 54% and 20% in the presence of it. Involvement of the great vessels was also the single independent prognostic factor in the patients with stage III disease although completeness of resection or involvement of other organs were not. The 10-year and 20-year survivals in patients with stage III disease were 97% and 75% in the absence of involvement of the great vessels, and 70% and 29% in the presence of it. CONCLUSION Although the Masaoka staging system is a valuable prognostic factor, the category of stage III is heterogeneous and consists of 2 groups with distinct prognoses depending on involvement of the great vessels.


The Japanese Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2014

Thoracic and cardiovascular surgery in Japan during 2012

Munetaka Masuda; Hiroyuki Kuwano; Meinoshin Okumura; Jun Amano; Hirokuni Arai; Shunsuke Endo; Yuichiro Doki; Junjiro Kobayashi; Noboru Motomura; Hiroshi Nishida; Yoshikatsu Saiki; Fumihiro Tanaka; Kazuo Tanemoto; Yasushi Toh; Hiroyasu Yokomise

The Japanese Association for Thoracic Surgery has conducted annual surveys of thoracic surgery throughout Japan since 1987 to determine the statistics regarding the number of procedures according to operative category. Here, we have summarized the results from our annual survey of thoracic surgery performed during 2012. The incidence of hospital mortality was added to the survey to determine the nationwide status, which has contributed to the Japanese surgeons to understand the present status of thoracic surgery in Japan and to make progress to improve operative results by comparing their work with those of others. The Association was able to gain a better understanding of the present problems as well as future prospects, which has been reflected to its activity including education of its members. Thirty-day mortality (so-called ‘‘operative mortality) is defined as death within 30 days of operation regardless of the patient’s geographic location and even though the patient had been discharged from the hospital. Hospital mortality is defined as death within any time interval after an operation if the patient had not been discharged from the hospital. Hospital-to-hospital transfer is not considered discharge: transfer to a nursing home or a rehabilitation unit is considered hospital discharge unless the patient subsequently dies of complications of the operation. The definitions of the Ad Hoc Liaison Committee for Standardizing Definitions of Prosthetic Heart Valve Morbidity of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons and Annual report by The Japanese Association for Thoracic Surgery: Committee for Scientific Affair


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Epithelial to Mesenchymal Transition Is a Determinant of Sensitivity to Chemoradiotherapy in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Yasushi Shintani; Akira Okimura; Katsutoshi Sato; Tomoyuki Nakagiri; Yoshihisa Kadota; M. Inoue; Noriyoshi Sawabata; Masato Minami; Naoki Ikeda; Kunimistu Kawahara; Tomoshige Matsumoto; Nariaki Matsuura; Mitsunori Ohta; Meinoshin Okumura

BACKGROUND The epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a fundamental biological process during which epithelial cells change to a mesenchymal phenotype; it has a profound impact on cancer progression. The purpose of this study was to clarify the role of EMT in the sensitivity of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to chemoradiotherapy (CRT). METHODS We evaluated the correlation between EMT and sensitivity to chemotherapy or radiotherapy using NSCLC cells induced to undergo EMT with epidermal growth factor or transforming growth factor-β1. Immunohistochemistry was used to examine the expression of EMT markers, E-cadherin, cytokeratin, N-cadherin, and vimentin in 50 tumor specimens obtained from patients with NSCLC both before and after CRT. RESULTS The EMT resulted in increased malignant potential and reduced sensitivity to cisplatin and paclitaxel in NSCLC cells. Furthermore, chronic exposure to cisplatin, paclitaxel, or radiation altered the cells into therapy-resistant sub-lines that showed phenotypic changes such as a spindle-cell shape and increased EMT marker expression. Also, decreased expression of epithelial markers and upregulation of mesenchymal markers were detected in surgically resected specimens after CRT compared with biopsy specimens obtained before treatment. The disease-free survival rate of patients with EMT marker-positive tumors was significantly lower than that of those with EMT marker-negative tumors. CONCLUSIONS The EMT marker expression was detected in NSCLC tumors after CRT, indicating that EMT changes are associated with insensitivity to CRT. New therapeutic combinations using EMT-signaling inhibitors may be needed to circumvent the resistance of some types of cancer to CRT.


Cancer Science | 2007

Proteomics-based identification of α-enolase as a tumor antigen in non-small lung cancer

Ping He; Tetsuji Naka; Satoshi Serada; Minoru Fujimoto; Toshio Tanaka; Shoji Hashimoto; Yoshihito Shima; Tomoki Yamadori; Hidekazu Suzuki; Tomonori Hirashima; Kaoru Matsui; Hiroyuki Shiono; Meinoshin Okumura; Toshiro Nishida; Isao Tachibana; Naoko Norioka; Shigemi Norioka; Ichiro Kawase

Autoantibodies against tumor antigens represent one type of biomarker that may be assayed in serum for detection of cancer and monitoring of disease progression. In the present study, we used a proteomics‐based approach to identify novel tumor antigens in non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). By combining two‐dimensional electrophoresis, western blotting, mass spectrometry and enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay technology, we detected autoantibodies against α‐enolase in a subset of NSCLC patients’ sera. When ‘Mean ODhealthy control sera + 3 SDhealthy control sera’ was used as the cut‐off point, the prevalence of this autoantibody was 27.7% in patients with NSCLC (26 of 94), 1.7% in healthy control subjects (1 of 60), and not detectable in sera from 15 patients with small cell lung cancer, 18 patients with gastrointestinal cancer and nine patients with Mycobacterium avium complex infection of lung. Immunohistochemical staining showed that expression of α‐enolase was increased in cancer tissues of NSCLC patients, and flow cytometric analysis confirmed the expression of α‐enolase at the surface of cancer cells. The combined detection of autoantibodies against α‐enolase, carcinoembryonic antigen and cytokeratin 19 fragment (CYFRA21‐1) enhanced sensitivity for the diagnosis of NSCLC. Therefore, autoantibodies against α‐enolase may constitute a promising biomarker for NSCLC. (Cancer Sci 2007; 98: 1234–1240)


The Japanese Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2016

Thoracic and cardiovascular surgery in Japan during 2014

Munetaka Masuda; Meinoshin Okumura; Yuichiro Doki; Shunsuke Endo; Yasutaka Hirata; Junjiro Kobayashi; Hiroyuki Kuwano; Noboru Motomura; Hiroshi Nishida; Yoshikatsu Saiki; Hideyuki Shimizu; Fumihiro Tanaka; Kazuo Tanemoto; Yasushi Toh; Hiroyuki Tsukihara; Shinji Wakui; Hiroyasu Yokomise

The Japanese Association for Thoracic Surgery has conducted annual surveys of thoracic surgery throughout Japan since 1986 to determine the statistics regarding the number of procedures according to operative category. Here, we have summarized the results from our annual survey of thoracic surgery performed during 2014.

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Masayoshi Inoue

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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