Tomoaki Miyagawa
Hitachi
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tomoaki Miyagawa.
International Journal of Urology | 2010
Tomoaki Miyagawa; Satoru Ishikawa; Tomokazu Kimura; Takahiro Suetomi; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Toshiyuki Irie; Masanao Kondoh; Tsuyoshi Mitake
Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of the medical navigation technique, namely, Real‐time Virtual Sonography (RVS), for targeted prostate biopsy.
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Tomoaki Miyagawa; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Takeshi Matsumura; Natsui Kawazoe; Satoru Ishikawa; Tatsuro Shimokama; Naoto Miyanaga; Hideyuki Akaza
OBJECTIVE Elastography is a technique for detecting the stiffness of tissues. We applied elastography for the diagnosis of prostate cancer and evaluated the usefulness of elastography for prostate biopsy. METHODS The subjects of this study were 311 patients who underwent elastography during prostate needle biopsy at Hitachi General Hospital. Strain images obtained during compression of the prostate tissue were displayed on a monitor and recorded on the computer. The elastographic moving images (EMI) were evaluated retrospectively. The evaluable images and biopsy results were compared in terms of the feasibility and accuracy. RESULTS The median patient age was 67 years (range 50-85 years), the median serum level of prostate-specific antigen was 8.4 ng/ml (range 0.3-82.5 ng/ml) and the median prostate volume was 42.6 ml (range 12-150 ml). Among the 311 patients, prostate cancer was detected in 95 patients (30%) by biopsy. The diagnostic sensitivity was 37.9% for digital rectal examination (DRE) and 59.0% for transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS), whereas it was 72.6% for elastography and 89.5% for the combination of TRUS and elastography. Elastography-positive EMIs with negative biopsies were eventually determined to be due to benign prostatic hyperplasia. CONCLUSION Elastography has a significantly higher sensitivity for the detection of prostate cancer than the conventionally used examinations including DRE and TRUS. It is a useful real-time diagnostic method because it is not invasive, and simultaneous evaluation is possible while performing TRUS.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2010
Masakazu Tsutsumi; Tomoaki Miyagawa; Takeshi Matsumura; Tsuyoshi Endo; Syuya Kandori; Tatsuro Shimokama; Satoru Ishikawa
OBJECTIVE The use of elastography is limited for prostate cancer detection because of the difficulty in obtaining stable and reproducible images. To overcome these limitations, we developed a new technique called real-time balloon inflation elastography (RBIE); with RBIE, balloon inflation and deflation are used in place of manual compression. We present the accuracy and feasibility of the RBIE technique for detecting prostate cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS The results of a pathologic analysis of 55 prostatectomy specimens were compared with elastographic moving images obtained at the time of biopsy of the prostate. RESULTS The RBIE technique generated stable and repeatable elastographic moving images. The percentage of images affected by artifact due to slippage in the compression plane was reduced to 1% using the RBIE method compared with 32% using the manual compression method. With regard to tumor location, elastographic moving images obtained using the RBIE technique were in complete agreement with clinicopathologic evaluation of tumor location in eight cases (15%), showed partial agreement in 43 cases (78%), and disagreed in four cases (7%). In three different regions of the prostate, 84% of anterior tumors, 85% of middle tumors, and 60% of posterior tumors were detected. The tumor detection rates by Gleason score were 60% in tumors with a Gleason score of 5 or 6, 73% in tumors with a Gleason score of 7, 72% in tumors with a Gleason score of 8, and 74% in tumors with a Gleason score of 9 or 10. CONCLUSION The RBIE method improved the quality of elastographic moving images compared with the manual compression method. High-grade tumors and tumors of impalpable regions of the prostate were more frequently detected using RBIE. We conclude that RBIE is a promising method with which to detect prostate cancer.
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013
Hiromu Inai; Koji Kawai; Takahiro Kojima; Akira Joraku; Toru Shimazui; Atsushi Yamauchi; Tomoaki Miyagawa; Tsuyoshi Endo; Yoshiharu Fukuhara; Jun Miyazaki; Katsunori Uchida; Hiroyuki Nishiyama
OBJECTIVE To investigate the dose intensity of induction chemotherapy and oncological outcomes of metastatic testicular cancer under centralized management through a regional medical network. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively analyzed the outcomes of 86 metastatic testicular cancer patients who were given induction chemotherapy at Tsukuba University Hospital and four branch hospitals between January 2000 and November 2010. Principally, management of patients with poor-prognosis disease and patients having risk factors for bleomycin, etoposide and cisplatin were referred to Tsukuba University Hospital before chemotherapy. For high-risk groups, etoposide and cisplatin or etoposide, ifosfamide and cisplatin was used as an alternative to bleomycin, etoposide and cisplatin. RESULTS Overall, 56 and 30 patients were treated at Tsukuba University Hospital and branch hospitals, respectively. Forty-seven, 18 and 21 patients were classified with good-, intermediate- and poor-prognosis disease, respectively, according to the International Germ Cell Cancer Collaborative Group criteria. Eighteen of the 21 patients (86%) with poor-prognosis disease were treated at Tsukuba University Hospital from the beginning of induction chemotherapy. Induction chemotherapy with a high relative dose intensity was possible in most patients. The average relative dose intensity of each drug was >0.96. Treatment procedures other than induction chemotherapy were efficiently centralized; 74% of post-chemotherapy surgery and all second-line or subsequent chemotherapies were performed at Tsukuba University Hospital. The 5-year overall survival rates of the good-, intermediate- and poor-prognosis groups were 97, 93 and 84%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Induction chemotherapy with high relative dose intensity, post-chemotherapy surgery and salvage chemotherapy was accomplished efficiently through centralization of management. Oncological outcomes were excellent, especially in patients with poor-prognosis disease, whose 5-year OS reached 84%.
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2007
Tomoaki Miyagawa; Toru Shimazui; Shiro Hinotsu; Takehiro Oikawa; Noritoshi Sekido; Naoto Miyanaga; Koji Kawai; Hideyuki Akaza
Hinyokika kiyo. Acta urologica Japonica | 2013
Atsushi Ikeda; Tomoaki Miyagawa; Kurobe M; Uchida M; Takahiro Kojima; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Ito S; Sugita S; Hiroyuki Nishiyama
Hinyokika kiyo. Acta urologica Japonica | 2012
Tomokazu Kimura; Takahiro Suetomi; Tomoaki Miyagawa; Masakazu Tsutsumi
The Journal of Urology | 2010
Tomoaki Miyagawa; Satoru Ishikawa; Taeko Matsuoka; Shuya Kandori; Masahiro Emura; Takahiro Suetomi; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Toshiyuki Irie; Masanao Kondou; Tsuyoshi Mitake
The Japanese Journal of Urology | 2015
Tomoaki Miyagawa; Ken Tanaka; Atsushi Ikeda; Manabu Komine; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Atsushi Shinagawa
Hinyokika kiyo. Acta urologica Japonica | 2012
Kurobe M; Takahiro Kojima; Uchida M; Tomoaki Miyagawa; Masakazu Tsutsumi; Sugita S