Norimasa Tsukada
Keio University
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Featured researches published by Norimasa Tsukada.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2012
Masanori Inoue; Seishi Nakatsuka; Hideki Yashiro; Nobutake Ito; Yotaro Izumi; Yoshikane Yamauchi; Kohei Hashimoto; Keisuke Asakura; Norimasa Tsukada; Masafumi Kawamura; Hiroaki Nomori; Sachio Kuribayashi
PURPOSE To evaluate the safety and feasibility of cryoablation for lung tumors as well as the incidence of, and risk factors for, complications. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study included 193 cryoablation sessions for 396 lung tumors in 117 consecutive patients. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to assess risk factors for common complications. Changes in laboratory values were analyzed the day after cryoablation. RESULTS Pneumothorax, pleural effusion, and hemoptysis occurred after 119 (61.7%), 136 (70.5%), and 71 (36.8%) sessions, respectively. Phrenic nerve palsy, frostbite, and empyema occurred after one session each (0.52%). Proximal tumor implantation was observed in one of 471 punctures (0.20%). Of 119 sessions with pneumothorax, 21 (17.6%) required chest tube insertion and two (1.7%) required pleurodesis. Delayed and recurrent pneumothorax occurred in 15 of 193 sessions each (7.8%). A greater number of cryoprobes was a significant (P = .001) predictor of pneumothorax. Male sex (P = .047) and no history of ipsilateral surgery (P = .012) were predictors for the need for chest tube insertion, and no history of ipsilateral surgery (P = .021) was a predictor for delayed/recurrent pneumothorax. Greater number of cryoprobes (P = .001) and no history of ipsilateral surgery (P = .004) were predictors for pleural effusion. Greater number of cryoprobes (P < .001) and younger age (P = .034) were predictors for hemoptysis. Mean changes in white blood cell count, platelet count, hemoglobin level, and C-reactive protein level were 2,418/μL ± 2,260 (P < .001), -2.0 × 10(4)/μL ± 3.2 (P < .001), -0.77 mg/dL ± 0.89 (P < .001), and 3.0 mg/dL ± 2.9 (P < .001), respectively. CONCLUSIONS Percutaneous cryoablation could be performed minimally invasively with acceptable rates of complications.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Yoshikane Yamauchi; Yotaro Izumi; Masafumi Kawamura; Seishi Nakatsuka; Hideki Yashiro; Norimasa Tsukada; Masanori Inoue; Keisuke Asakura; Hiroaki Nomori
Objective To evaluate the safety and efficacy of cryoablation for metastatic lung tumors from colorectal cancer. Methods The procedures were performed on 24 patients (36–82 years of age, with a median age of 62; 17 male patients, 7 female patients) for 55 metastatic tumors in the lung, during 30 sessions. The procedural safety, local progression free interval, and overall survival were assessed by follow-up computed tomographic scanning performed every 3–4 months. Results The major complications were pneumothorax, 19 sessions (63%), pleural effusion, 21 sessions (70%), transient and self-limiting hemoptysis, 13 sessions (43%) and tract seeding, 1 session (3%). The 1- and 3-year local progression free intervals were 90.8% and 59%, respectively. The 3-years local progression free intervals of tumors ≤15 mm in diameter was 79.8% and that of tumors >15 mm was 28.6% (p = 0.001; log-rank test). The 1- and 3-year overall survival rates were 91% and 59.6%, respectively. Conclusion The results indicated that percutaneous cryoablation is a feasible treatment option. The local progression free interval was satisfactory at least for tumors that were ≤15 mm in diameter.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2013
Hideki Yashiro; Seishi Nakatsuka; Masanori Inoue; Masafumi Kawamura; Norimasa Tsukada; Keisuke Asakura; Yoshikane Yamauchi; Kohei Hashimoto; Sachio Kuribayashi
PURPOSE To evaluate factors predicting local tumor progression after percutaneous cryoablation of lung tumors (PCLT). MATERIALS AND METHODS Seventy-one consecutive patients with 210 tumors (11 primary and 199 metastatic pulmonary neoplasms; mean maximum diameter, 12.8 mm) were treated with 102 sessions of PCLT. Rates of local tumor progression and technique effectiveness were estimated by Kaplan-Meier method. Multiple variables were evaluated with the log-rank test, followed by uni- and multivariate multilevel analyses to identify independent risk factors, and hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS Median follow-up period was 454 days (range, 79-2,467 d). Local tumor progression occurred in 50 tumors (23.8%). One-, 2-, and 3-year local progression-free rates were 80.4%, 69.0%, and 67.7%, respectively, and technique effectiveness rates were 91.4%, 83.0%, and 83.0%, respectively. Existence of a thick vessel (diameter≥3 mm) no more than 3 mm from the edge of the tumor was assessed as an independent factor (HR, 3.84; 95% CI, 1.59-9.30; P = .003) associated with local progression by multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS Presence of a vessel at least 3 mm in diameter close to the tumor represents an independent risk factor for local progression after PCLT.
Cryobiology | 2010
Seishi Nakatsuka; Hideki Yashiro; Masanori Inoue; Sachio Kuribayashi; Masafumi Kawamura; Yotaro Izumi; Norimasa Tsukada; Yoshikane Yamauchi; Kohei Hashimoto; Kansei Iwata; Taisuke Nagasawa; Yi Shan Lin
Regarding cryoablation for the malignant lung tumors, multiple trials of the freeze-thaw process have been made, and we considered it necessary to view and analyze the freeze-thaw process as a freeze-thaw sequence. We caused the sequence in a porcine lung in vivo by using an acicular, cylindrical stainless-steel probe as the heat source for the freeze-thaw sequence and cooling to -150 °C with super high-pressure argon gas by causing the Joule-Thomson effect phenomenon at the tip of the probe. In this experiment, we examined the sequence by measuring the temperature and using the isothermal curve and the freezing function. As a result, it was demonstrated that the freezing characteristics considerably differed in the first sequence and the second sequence from those of non-aerated organs such as liver and kidney. In our experiments on porcine lung, thermal properties were considered to change as the bleeding caused by the first thawing infiltrated in the lung parenchyma, and it was confirmed that the frozen area in the second cycle was dramatically enlarged as compared with the first cycle (when a similar sequence is continuously repeated, we say it as cycle). This paper provides these details.
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2006
Masafumi Kawamura; Yotaro Izumi; Norimasa Tsukada; Keisuke Asakura; Hiroaki Sugiura; Hideki Yashiro; Keiko Nakano; Seishi Nakatsuka; Sachio Kuribayashi; Koichi Kobayashi
Archive | 2009
Kansei Iwata; Yasushi Iwata; Taisuke Nagasawa; Masafumi Kawamura; Yotaro Izumi; Masanori Inoue; Norimasa Tsukada; Hideki Yashiro
Cryobiology | 2005
Yotaro Izumi; Norimasa Tsukada; Eiji Ikeda; Masafumi Kawamura; Koichi Kobayashi
Archive | 2010
Koichi Kobayashi; Hideki Yashiro; Keiko Nakano; Seishi Nakatsuka; Sachio Kuribayashi; Masafumi Kawamura; Yotaro Izumi; Norimasa Tsukada; Keisuke Asakura
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010
Yoshikane Yamauchi; Masafumi Kawamura; Seishi Nakatsuka; Yotaro Izumi; Hideki Yashiro; Norimasa Tsukada; Masanori Inoue; Sachio Kuribayashi; Hiroaki Nomori
Archive | 2009
Kansei Iwata; 岩田 完成; Yasushi Iwata; 岩田 靖; Taisuke Nagasawa; 泰輔 長澤; Masafumi Kawamura; 川村 雅文; Yotaro Izumi; 陽太郎 泉; Seishi Nakatsuka; 誠之 中塚; Masanori Inoue; 井上 政則; Norimasa Tsukada; 紀理 塚田; Hideki Yashiro; 英樹 屋代