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Featured researches published by Milton Kiyabu.


Annals of Surgery | 1999

Occult Esophageal Adenocarcinoma: Extent of Disease and Implications for Effective Therapy

John J. Nigro; Jeffrey A. Hagen; Tom R. DeMeester; Steven R. DeMeester; Jörg Theisen; Jeffrey H. Peters; Milton Kiyabu

OBJECTIVE The need for esophagectomy in patients with Barretts esophagus, with no endoscopically visible lesion, and a biopsy showing high-grade dysplasia or adenocarcinoma has been questioned. Recently, endoscopic techniques to ablate the neoplastic mucosa have been encouraged. The aim of this study was to determine the extent of disease present in patients with clinically occult esophageal adenocarcinoma to define the magnitude of therapy required to achieve cure. METHODS Thirty-three patients with high-grade dysplasia (23 patients) or adenocarcinoma (10 patients) and no endoscopically visible lesion underwent repeat endoscopy and systematic biopsy followed by esophagectomy. The surgical specimens were analyzed to determine the biopsy error rate in detecting occult adenocarcinoma. In those with cancer, the depth of wall penetration and the presence of lymph node metastases on conventional histology and immunohistochemistry staining was determined. The findings were compared with those in 12 patients (1 with high-grade dysplasia, 11 with adenocarcinoma) who had visible lesions on endoscopy. RESULTS The biopsy error rate for detecting occult adenocarcinoma was 43%. Of 25 patients with cancer and no visible lesion, the cancer was limited to the mucosa in 22 (88%) and to the submucosa in 3 (12%). After en bloc esophagectomy, one patient without a visible lesion had a single node metastasis on conventional histology. No additional node metastases were identified on immunohistochemistry. The 5-year survival rate after esophagectomy was 90%. Patients with endoscopically visible lesions were significantly more likely to have invasion beyond the mucosa (9/12 vs. 3/25, p = 0.01) and involvement of lymph nodes (5/9 vs. 1/10, p = 0.057). CONCLUSIONS Endoscopy with systematic biopsy cannot reliably exclude the presence of occult adenocarcinoma in Barretts esophagus. The lack of an endoscopically visible lesion does not preclude cancer invasion beyond the muscularis mucosae, cautioning against the use of mucosal ablative procedures. The rarity of lymph node metastases in these patients encourages a more limited resection with greater emphasis on improved alimentary function (esophageal stripping with vagal nerve preservation) to provide a quality of life compatible with the excellent 5-year survival rate of 90%.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1999

Prevalence and location of nodal metastases in distal esophageal adenocarcinoma confined to the wall: Implications for therapy

John J. Nigro; Jeffrey A. Hagen; Tom R. DeMeester; Steven R. DeMeester; Jeffrey H. Peters; Stefan Öberg; Jörg Theisen; Milton Kiyabu; Peter F. Crookes; Cedric G. Bremner

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to characterize the prevalence and location of regional lymph node metastases in adenocarcinoma confined to the esophagal wall, to determine the extent of dissection required, and to investigate the applicability of nonoperative therapy. METHODS Histologic evaluation of the resected specimens after en bloc esophagogastrectomy with mediastinal and abdominal lymphadenectomy was performed on 37 patients with adenocarcinoma confined to the esophageal wall. Follow-up was complete in all patients (median 24 months). RESULTS Fifteen patients (41%) had intramucosal tumors. Twelve (32%) had submucosal tumors and 10 (27%) had muscular invasion. The prevalence of regional lymph node metastases (15/37 patients, 41%) increased progressively with depth of tumor invasion, with involved nodes identified in 80% of patients with muscular invasion. Lymph node metastases were also more common at distant node stations in intramuscular tumors (5/10, 50%). Actuarial survival for the entire group was 63% at 5 years. Recurrence was identified in 6 of the 37 patients (16%), with the risk of recurrence correlating with tumor depth. CONCLUSIONS Tumor depth is a strong predictor of the probabilities of regional lymph node metastases, the likelihood of involvement of distant node groups, and the risk of recurrence. Patients with invasion of the muscular wall are at particularly high risk. En bloc esophagectomy with mediastinal and abdominal lymphadenectomy has the highest likelihood of achieving an R0 resection. The long-term survival and low recurrence rate achieved with an en bloc esophagectomy emphasizes the importance of an aggressive lymph node dissection to remove all potentially involved nodes.


Annals of Surgery | 2001

Use of Fibrin Sealant for Prosthetic Mesh Fixation in Laparoscopic Extraperitoneal Inguinal Hernia Repair

Namir Katkhouda; Eli Mavor; Melanie H. Friedlander; Rodney J. Mason; Milton Kiyabu; Steven W. Grant; Kranti Achanta; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Krishna Narayanan; Rahila Essani

ObjectiveTo evaluate the efficacy of mesh fixation with fibrin sealant (FS) in laparoscopic preperitoneal inguinal hernia repair and to compare it with stapled fixation. Summary Background DataLaparoscopic hernia repair involves the fixation of the prosthetic mesh in the preperitoneal space with staples to avoid displacement leading to recurrence. The use of staples is associated with a small but significant number of complications, mainly nerve injury and hematomas. FS (Tisseel) is a biodegradable adhesive obtained by a combination of human-derived fibrinogen and thrombin, duplicating the last step of the coagulation cascade. It can be used as an alternative method of fixation. MethodsA prosthetic mesh was placed laparoscopically into the preperitoneal space in both groins in 25 female pigs and fixed with either FS or staples or left without fixation. The method of fixation was chosen by randomization. The pigs were killed after 12 days to assess early graft incorporation. The following outcome measures were evaluated: macroscopic findings, including graft alignment and motion, tensile strength between the grafts and surrounding tissues, and histologic findings (fibrous reaction and inflammatory response). ResultsThe procedures were completed laparoscopically in 49 sites. Eighteen grafts were fixed with FS and 16 with staples; 15 were not fixed. There was no significant difference in graft motion between the FS and stapled groups, but the nonfixed mesh had significantly more graft motion than in either of the fixed groups. There was no significant difference in median tensile strength between the FS and stapled groups. The tensile strength in the nonfixed group was significantly lower than the other two groups. FS triggered a significantly stronger fibrous reaction and inflammatory response than in the stapled and control groups. No infection related to method of fixation was observed in any group. ConclusionAn adequate mesh fixation in the extraperitoneal inguinal area can be accomplished using FS. This method is mechanically equivalent to the fixation achieved by staples and superior to nonfixed grafts. Biologic soft fixation with FS will prevent early graft migration and will avoid the complications associated with staple use.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1994

Nodal metastasis and sites of recurrence after en bloc esophagectomy for adenocarcinoma

Geoffrey W.B. Clark; Jeffrey H. Peters; Adrian P. Ireland; Afshin Ehsan; Jeffrey A. Hagen; Milton Kiyabu; Cedric G. Bremner; Tom R. DeMeester

The operative specimens from 43 patients undergoing en bloc esophagectomy for adenocarcinoma of the lower esophagus or cardia were analyzed. Depth of invasion of the tumor and extent and location of lymph node metastases were determined. Postoperative recurrence was identified from positive findings on successive 3-month computed tomographic scans. Positive nodes occurred in 33% (2/6) of intramucosal tumors, 67% (6/9) of intramural tumors, and 89% (25/28) of transmural tumors (p < 0.01). Commonly involved nodes were those in the lesser curve of the stomach (42%), parahiatal nodes (35%), paraesophageal nodes (28%), and celiac nodes (21%). Excluding perioperative deaths, follow-up was complete for 38 patients. Twenty patients had recurrence. Fifteen patients (40%, 15/38) had nodal recurrence: cervical, 7.9% (3/38); superior mediastinal, 21% (8/38); and abdominal, 24% (9/38) (retropancreatic in 7 and retrocrural in 2). Of 5 patients with nodal recurrence alone, 3 (60%) had recurrence at sites outside the margins of resection. Patients with four metastatic nodes or less had a survival advantage over those with more than four (p < 0.05). There was no difference in survival according to location of nodal metastases. Two (22.2%) of 9 patients with celiac node metastases survived longer than 4 years. Adenocarcinoma of the lower esophagus and cardia spreads widely to mediastinal and abdominal nodes, and death can occur from nodal disease. Rates of lymph node metastases increase with the depth of the primary tumor. Patients with lymphatic metastases can be cured particularly if there are fewer than four nodes involved. Curative surgical therapy necessitates wide lymph node resection to ensure removal of all metastatic nodes.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1999

Node status in transmural esophageal adenocarcinoma and outcome after en bloc esophagectomy

John J. Nigro; Steven R. DeMeester; Jeffrey A. Hagen; Tom R. DeMeester; Jeffrey H. Peters; Milton Kiyabu; Guilherme M. Campos; Stefan Öberg; Otávio Leite Gastal; Peter F. Crookes; Cedric G. Bremner

OBJECTIVE Adenocarcinoma has replaced squamous cell as the most common esophageal cancer in the United States. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and location of lymph node metastases, the feasibility of performing an R0 resection, and disease recurrence and survival in patients with transmural adenocarcinoma of the lower esophagus and gastroesophageal junction. METHODS Forty-four patients with transmural adenocarcinoma underwent en bloc esophagectomy with systematic thoracic and abdominal lymphadenectomy. They were followed up for a median of 23 months. RESULTS Actuarial survival for the entire group was 26% at 5 years. The most important predictors of the likelihood of recurrent disease and 5-year survival were the presence and number of lymph node metastases and the ratio of involved to total removed nodes. Seven patients (16%) were found to have no lymph node metastases and had an 85% 5-year survival. In contrast, patients with more than 4 involved nodes or a node ratio greater than 0.1 had a high likelihood of recurrence and death. Location of involved lymph nodes did not predict the likelihood of recurrence or death. Despite all patients having transmural tumors, recurrence within the field of the en bloc resection occurred in only 1 patient (2%). CONCLUSIONS En bloc esophagectomy in patients with transmural esophageal adenocarcinoma is required to obtain the survival benefit of an R0 resection, to adequately assess lymphatic tumor burden, and to be able to predict the likelihood of recurrence and death and thereby guide the use of postoperative adjuvant therapy.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1992

Multiple granular cell tumors of the gastrointestinal tract with subsequent development of esophageal squamous carcinoma.

Amita Joshi; Parakrama Chandrasoma; Milton Kiyabu

SummaryA 52-year-old woman initially presented to our medical center with synchronous, submucosal tumors of the esophagus, stomach, and transverse colon. The gastric and colonic tumors were resected, and both displayed infiltrating sheets of polygonal cells with coarsely granular cytoplasm and small vesicular nuclei. The neoplastic cells of both tumors were immunoreactive for S-100 protein. Ultrastructural studies revealed the lysosomal nature of the cytoplasmic granules. Although the esophageal mass was not resected, it was felt that this represented another focus of granular cell tumor of the gastrointestinal tract. Two years later, she presented with disseminated squamous carcinoma of the esophagus. At autopsy, a submucosal granular cell tumor was found adjacent to the squamous carcinoma of the esophagus. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of synchronous granular cell tumors that involved multiple segments of the gastrointestinal tract, one of which was later associated with a squamous carcinoma of the esophagus.


Archives of Surgery | 1994

Is Barrett's Metaplasia the Source of Adenocarcinomas of the Cardia?

Geoffrey W.B. Clark; Thomas C. Smyrk; Patricio Burdiles; Sebastian F. Hoeft; Jeffrey H. Peters; Milton Kiyabu; Ronald A. Hinder; Cedric G. Bremner; Tom R. DeMeester


Archives of Surgery | 1994

Selection of Patients for Curative or Palliative Resection of Esophageal Cancer Based on Preoperative Endoscopic Ultrasonography

Jeffrey H. Peters; Sebastian F. Hoeft; Johannes Heimbucher; Ross M. Bremner; Tom R. DeMeester; Cedric G. Bremner; Geoffrey W.B. Clark; Milton Kiyabu; Yuri Parisky


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1990

Carcinosarcoma of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses

Maisie L. Shindo; Robert B. Stanley; Milton Kiyabu


Surgery | 2001

Retinoic acid receptor-α messenger RNA expression is increased and retinoic acid receptor-γ expression is decreased in Barrett's intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia, adenocarcinoma sequence

Reginald V. Lord; Peter I. Tsai; Kathleen D. Danenberg; Jeffrey H. Peters; Tom R. DeMeester; Denice D. Tsao-Wei; Susan Groshen; Dennis Salonga; Ji Min Park; Peter F. Crookes; Milton Kiyabu; Para Chandrasoma; Peter V. Danenberg

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Tom R. DeMeester

University of Southern California

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Cedric G. Bremner

University of Southern California

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Jeffrey A. Hagen

University of Southern California

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Geoffrey W.B. Clark

University of Southern California

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John J. Nigro

Boston Children's Hospital

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Para Chandrasoma

University of Southern California

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Peter F. Crookes

University of Southern California

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Steven R. DeMeester

University of Southern California

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David Chun

University of Southern California

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