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Dive into the research topics where Tatsuya Azumi is active.

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Featured researches published by Tatsuya Azumi.


Surgery Today | 2008

Hematoma-Directed and Ultrasound-Guided Breast-Conserving Surgery for Nonpalpable Breast Cancer After Mammotome Biopsy

Hiroki Inui; Masahiro Watatani; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Toshiya Hojo; Kyoko Hirai; Munehisa Yamato; Makoto Fujishima; Tatsuya Azumi; Hitoshi Shiozaki

Stereotactic vacuum-assisted (Mammotome™) breast biopsy is a powerful diagnostic tool for detecting microcalcifications on mammography, but it is difficult to remove the targeted lesion precisely when subsequent breast-conserving surgery is to be carried out. We achieved satisfactory results by performing hematoma-directed breast-conserving surgery after stereotactic Mammotome biopsy in seven patients. To identify the exact location of the Mammotome biopsy during the breast-conserving surgery, we created an iatrogenic hematoma in the biopsy cavity using patient’s blood. This hematoma was detected easily on intraoperative ultrasonography in all patients, and was palpable as a soft mass in five of the seven patients. The microcalcifications were completely removed in all patients, and no cancer cells were found in the margin surfaces after breast-conserving surgery. There were no complications during the injection of the patient’s blood into the biopsy cavity or during the hematoma-directed surgery. We describe this new procedure of hematoma-directed breast-conserving surgery following Mammotome biopsy for nonpalpable cancer with microcalcifications.


Breast Cancer | 2004

Clinical Experience of Weekly Paclitaxel-Based Treatment as Preoperative Chemotherapy for Patients with Primary Breast Cancer

Masahiro Watatani; Kazuki Ueda; Koji Daito; Tatsuya Azumi; Teruhiko Hirai; Munehisa Yamato; Toshiya Hojo; Kyoko Hirai; Hiroki Inui; Hitoshi Shiozaki

BackgroundPaclitaxel is an effective agent in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of weekly paclitaxel-based preoperative chemotherapy in patients with large operable breast cancer.MethodsPatients initially received paclitaxel as a 3-hour infusion at 175 mg/m2. Three weeks after initial administration, two cycles of three weeks of paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 over a 1 hour infusion followed by a one week break were given. Of 22 patients, 9 had stage II (tumor diameter greater than 3 cm), 4 stage IIIA, 7 stage IIIB, and 2 stage IV (with ipsilateral supraclavicular lymph node metastasis) cancer, respectively.ResultsExcluding stageN patients, the overall response rate to paclitaxel chemotherapy was 80%. Four of the 20 patients (20%) showed a clinical complete response (cCR). Two of these showed pathologic complete response and the other 2 had only the ductal component remaining. The primary tumor response and axillary lymph node downstaging following preoperative chemotherapy tended to be related in 16 patients with clinically positive nodes. Breast conserving surgery was performed as a result of down-staging in the 9 stage II patients. Grade 3 neutropenia occurred in one patient when 175 mg/m2 of paclitaxel was administered, but no serious side effects developed during the weekly administration of paclitaxel.ConclusionThe use of weekly paclitaxel-based preoperative chemotherapy appears to yield a significant anti-tumor effect without inducing serious drug-related adverse effects. Furthermore, the effectiveness of this treatment appears to result in a higher frequency of breast conserving surgery.


Oncology Letters | 2014

O6‑methylguanine‑DNA methyltransferase as a prognostic and predictive marker for basal‑like breast cancer treated with cyclophosphamide‑based chemotherapy

Sayuri Isono; Makoto Fujishima; Tatsuya Azumi; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Yoshifumi Komoike; Masao Yukawa; Masahiro Watatani

The O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) protein protects cells from alkylating agents by removing alkyl groups from the O6-position of guanine. However, its effect on DNA damage induced by cyclophosphamide (CPM) is unclear. The present study investigated whether MGMT expression was correlated with prognosis in patients with breast cancer that was managed according to a common therapeutic protocol or treated with CPM-based chemotherapy. The intrinsic subtypes and MGMT protein expression levels were assessed in 635 consecutive patients with breast cancer using immunohistochemistry. In total, 425 (67%) luminal A, 95 (15%) luminal B, 47 (7%) human epidermal growth factor receptor-2+/estrogen receptor− (HER2+/ER−) and 48 (8%) basal-like subtypes were identified. Of these, MGMT positivity was identified in 398 (63%) of 635 breast cancers; 68% of luminal A, 67% of luminal B, 30% of HER2+/ER− and 46% of basal-like subtypes were positive. The overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) rates did not significantly differ according to the MGMT status among patients with luminal A, luminal B or HER2+/ER− subtypes, and patients with MGMT-negative basal-like cancers tended to have a longer DFS, but not a significantly longer OS time. CPM-containing chemotherapy was administered to 26%, 40%, 47% and 31% of patients with luminal A, luminal B, HER2+/ER− and basal-like tumors, respectively. Although the MGMT status and clinical outcomes of patients with the luminal A, luminal B or HER2+/ER− subtypes treated with CPM were not significantly correlated, the patients with MGMT-negative basal-like tumors who received CPM exhibited significantly improved DFS and OS compared with the CPM-treated patients with MGMT-positive tumors. MGMT may be a useful prognostic and predictive marker for CPM-containing chemotherapy in basal-like breast cancer.


International Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

The significance of bivariate cytokeratin and DNA flow cytometry in paraffin-embedded specimens of non-small cell lung cancer

Hiroshi Otsuka; Sadao Funai; Hiroshi Tsuda; Tatsuya Azumi; Satoshi Hara; Kiyotaka Okuno; Masayuki Yasutomi

AbstractBackground. The presence of non-tumor cells inside cancer tissue is one of the causes of errors in cell cycle analysis by DNA flow cytometry. The recent establishment of bivariate cytokeratin and DNA flow cytometry has made feasible the accurate assessment of tumor proliferative activity. Methods. Bivariate flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry examinations of paraffin-embedded specimens were performed in 92 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Determination of the S-phase fraction by flow cytometry, with cytokeratin gating (CK-gated SPF) and without gating (ungated SPF), and the expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen by immunohistochemistry (PCNA labeling index), were used to assess cancer cell proliferation. Results. Two tumors had DNA histograms with a coefficient of variation of more than 8.0% and were excluded from the flow cytometric analysis. In DNA diploid tumors (n = 25), the ungated SPFs (8.7 ± 3.6%) showed a lower distribution than the CK-gated SPFs (14.3 ± 4.7%) (P < 0.0001). In DNA aneuploid tumors (n = 65), there was no difference in distribution between the ungated SPFs (15.0 ± 8.3%) and the CK-gated SPFs (15.1 ± 7.1%) (P = 0.94). The CK-gated SPF and the PCNA labeling index of an individual tumor had a good correlation (P < 0.0001), and this agreed with the result showing that DNA diploid and aneuploid tumors had equal proliferative activity (P = 0.64 and P = 0.63, respectively). Conclusion. The technique using CK-gating markedly improved the SPF measurement in DNA diploid tumors. This assessment showed no difference in proliferative activity between DNA diploid and aneuploid tumors in NSCLC. Bivariate cytokeratin and DNA flow cytometry is an accurate and objective method for cancer-specific analysis, and will surely be informative in clinical oncology.


Anticancer Research | 2010

Relationship between Thymidylate Synthase (TYMS) Gene Polymorphism and TYMS Protein Levels in Patients with High-risk Breast Cancer

Makoto Fujishima; Hiroki Inui; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Tatsuya Azumi; Nao Yamamoto; Hiroaki Kato; Toshiya Hojo; Munehisa Yamato; Nobuki Matsunami; Hitoshi Shiozaki; Masahiro Watatani


Molecular and Clinical Oncology | 2016

One-step nucleic acid amplification assay for intraoperative prediction of advanced axillary lymph node metastases in breast cancer patients with sentinel lymph node metastasis

Michiyo Kubota; Yoshifumi Komoike; Mika Hamada; Wataru Shinzaki; Tatsuya Azumi; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Shigeru Imoto; Yoshifumi Takeyama; Kiyotaka Okuno


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2002

Ability of bivariate cytokeratin and deoxyribonucleic acid flow cytometry to determine the biologic aggressiveness of resectable non–small cell lung cancer

Hiroshi Otsuka; Sadao Funai; Tatsuya Azumi; Satoshi Hara; Kiyotaka Okuno; Masayuki Yasutomi


Annals of Oncology | 2013

O1–021CORRELATION OF MALIGNANCY AND SENSITIVITY TO PRIOR TREATMENT IN METASTATIC BREAST CANCER TREATED WITH ERIBULIN

Tsutomu Iwasa; Junji Tsurutani; Hiromichi Matsuoka; Kunio Okamoto; Toshio Shimizu; Takayasu Kurata; Kazuhiko Nakagawa; Tatsuya Azumi; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Yoshifumi Komoike


Nihon Rinsho Geka Gakkai Zasshi (journal of Japan Surgical Association) | 2017

Angiosarcoma Developing in the Skin after Breast Conservation Therapy and Radiotherapy for Breast Cancer—Two Case Studies—

Hirofumi Kanaizumi; Mika Hamada; Wataru Shinzaki; Tatsuya Azumi; Yukihiko Hashimoto; Yoshifumi Komoike


Molecular and Clinical Oncology | 2017

Lentinula edodes mycelia extract plus adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer patients: Results of a randomized study on host quality of life and immune function improvement

Yukiko Nagashima; Yoshino S; Shigeru Yamamoto; Noriko Maeda; Tatsuya Azumi; Yoshifumi Komoike; Kiyotaka Okuno; Tsutomu Iwasa; Junji Tsurutani; Kazuhiko Nakagawa; Oka Masaaki; Nagano Hiroaki

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