Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yasuharu Nakano is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yasuharu Nakano.


Surgery Today | 1999

Lymphatic routes of the stomach demonstrated by gastric carcinomas with solitary lymph node metastasis.

Takeo Kosaka; Nobuo Ueshige; Junichi Sugaya; Yasuharu Nakano; Takayoshi Akiyama; Fujio Tomita; Hitoshi Saito; Ichiro Kita; Shigeki Takashima

To clarify whether or not the lymphatic routes that have long been generally accepted are indeed correct, we retrospectively examined the clinical records of patients with solitary lymph node metastasis from gastric carcinoma. From 735 patients gastrectomized with lymph node dissection (more than D1), 51 (7%) were histologically proven to have only one lymph node involved. In 44 of these 51 patients, the involved nodes were all in the perigastric region (N1). There were also 7 patients with a jumping metastasis to the N2–N3 nodes. Three of them were found along the left gastric artery (#7 according to Japanese classification) and the other 4 were found along either the common hepatic artery (#8) or the proper hepatic artery (#12). The depth of invasion was submucosal in 2, proper-muscular in 2, subserosal in 1, and serosa-exposed in 2, and the conclusive stage was II in 2, IIIa in 3, and IIIb in 2. However, 1 of these patients died of liver cirrhosis and 2 died of pneumonia, while the other 4 were still alive at the time of this report more than 5 years after surgery. These results suggest that not every sentinel node is located in the perigastric region near the primary tumor and that, if the preoperative examination indicates submucosal invasion, then a systematic regional lymph node dissection should therefore be carried out.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2010

Axillary reverse mapping with indocyanine fluorescence imaging in patients with breast cancer

Masakuni Noguchi; Miki Yokoi; Yasuharu Nakano

The ARM technique was proposed to prevent arm lymphedema after ALND and/or SLN biopsy. However, several problems remain to be resolved in the practical application of this technique.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2012

Axillary reverse mapping using a fluorescence imaging system in breast cancer

Miki Noguchi; Masakuni Noguchi; Yasuharu Nakano; Yukako Ohno; Takeo Kosaka

The axillary reverse mapping (ARM) procedure is based on the hypothesis that the lymphatic drainage from the upper arm is different from that of the breast. However, the oncologic safety of the procedure has not yet been determined.


Breast Cancer | 2013

The changing role of axillary lymph node dissection for breast cancer

Masakuni Noguchi; Emi Morioka; Yukako Ohno; Miki Noguchi; Yasuharu Nakano; Takeo Kosaka

Currently, it is standard practice that patients with negative sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) do not undergo axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), whereas ALND is mandated in those with positive SLNs. However, the Z0011 trial showed that ALND could be safely omitted in selected patients with positive SLNs. This article presents a review and discussion of the current role and practice of ALND in the surgical management of breast cancer. A review of the English-language medical literature was performed using the MEDLINE database and cross-referencing major articles on the subject. It may be concluded that ALND can be avoided not only in patients with negative SLNs but also in those with positive SLNs who undergo breast-conserving therapy with whole-breast irradiation and appropriate systemic therapy. However, the omission of ALND would be indicated only in patients with a low axillary tumor burden. On the other hand, ALND remains a standard method of treating regional disease not only in patients with clinically positive nodes but also in other SLN-positive patients who do not meet the above criteria. Although the role of ALND has been limited to the prevention of axillary recurrence, SLN biopsy with whole-breast irradiation and systemic therapy can replace ALND in patients with a low axillary tumor burden.


Ejso | 2016

Oncoplastic breast conserving surgery: Volume replacement vs. volume displacement

Miki Noguchi; Miki Yokoi-Noguchi; Yukako Ohno; Emi Morioka; Yasuharu Nakano; Takeo Kosaka; T. Kurita

Oncoplastic breast conserving surgery (BCS) has emerged as a third option between conventional BCS and mastectomy. Oncoplastic BCS includes two fundamentally different approaches: volume replacement and volume displacement. The former involves partial mastectomy and immediate reconstruction of the breast with the transposition of autologous tissue from elsewhere, while the latter involves partial mastectomy and using the remaining breast tissue to fill the defect resulting from extirpation of the tumor. There are several benefits associated with oncoplastic BCS. First, it allows partial mastectomy without cosmetic penalties, and can achieve better cosmetic outcomes than total mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction. Second, it avoids the need for total mastectomy in an increasing number of patients without compromising local control. Third, partial breast reconstruction is less extensive and has fewer complications than conventional procedures. Partial mastectomy and partial breast reconstruction can be carried out either simultaneously as a one-stage procedure, or using a two-stage approach. Although patients prefer a one-stage procedure, it requires intraoperative confirmation of complete tumor excision using frozen-section analysis. Moreover, oncoplastic BCS requires combined skills, knowledge, and understanding of both oncological and plastic surgeries, which may be optimally achieved by an oncoplastic surgeon.


Ejso | 2015

Is axillary reverse mapping feasible in breast cancer patients

Miki Noguchi; S. Miura; Emi Morioka; Yukako Ohno; Miki Yokoi-Noguchi; Yasuharu Nakano; Takeo Kosaka

In the surgical treatment of breast cancer, axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) can be avoided not only in sentinel lymph node (SLN)-negative patients but also in SLN-positive patients who undergo breast-conserving surgery with whole-breast irradiation and systemic therapy. However, it should be performed not only in clinically node-positive patients but also in other SLN-positive patients who do not meet the Z-0011 criteria. The axillary reverse mapping (ARM) technique has been developing for identifying and preserving lymphatic drainage from the arm during ALND, thereby expected to minimize arm lymphedema. Nevertheless, ARM nodes could be involved not only in clinically node-positive patients but also in clinically node-negative patients. Previously, it was considered that preservation of the ARM lymphatics or lymph nodes is not oncologically safe in patients with axillary lymph node metastases. However, recent studies have demonstrated that the ARM procedure is oncologically feasible in clinically node-negative, SLN-positive patients when ARM nodes do not coincide with SLNs. When ARM nodes do not coincide with SLNs, they are not involved even in SLN-positive patients. On the other hand, ARM lymphatics/nodes within the boundaries of a standard ALND should be resected in SLN-positive patients, when ARM nodes are SLN-ARM nodes. Therefore, surgical treatment of the axilla can be individualized on the basis of the axillary nodal status.


Surgery Today | 2001

Multicentric Occurrence of Esophageal Cancer After Gastrectomy: A Preliminary Report

Kazuo Kitabayashi; Yasuharu Nakano; Hitoshi Saito; Keiichi Ueno; Ichiro Kita; Shigeki Takashima; Nozomu Kurose; Takayuki Nojima

Abstract The effect of gastrectomy on the subsequent development of esophageal cancer was investigated, focusing on its multicentric occurrence. We retrospectively evaluated 28 patients who underwent subtotal esophagectomy for intrathoracic esophageal cancer between 1985 and 1999. They were divided into two groups according to whether or not they had previously undergone a gastrectomy: group 1, comprising 7 patients who had undergone gastrectomy and group 2, comprising 21 patients who had not. Clinical profiles of the patients were obtained from the medical records and the whole resected esophagus was histopathologically examined. The interval between gastrectomy and esophagectomy in group 1 was significantly shorter in the patients who had undergone gastrectomy for gastric cancer than in those who had undergone gastrectomy for a peptic ulcer, and also in the patients for whom anastomosis had been performed by Billroth I compared with Billroth II. The patients in group 1 were significantly younger than those in group 2. The multiple occurrence of esophageal cancer was found in 4 of 5 patients (80%) in group 1, and in 2 of 18 patients (11%) in group 2, with significantly higher frequency being seen in group 1. More than two coexisting cancer lesions apart from the primary tumor were detected in all four patients. Histological examination of all the coexisting cancer lesions showed well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma confined within the superficial mucosal layer. No significant differences were noted in the location of the coexisting lesions between the oral and anal side of the primary tumors. Squamous dysplasia was randomly observed, especially around the cancer lesions. These findings suggest that gastrectomy precipitated subsequent chronic gastroesophageal reflux which in turn induced the development of squamous dysplasia and carcinoma at multiple locations in the esophagus.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2012

Local therapy and survival in breast cancer with distant metastases.

Masakuni Noguchi; Yasuharu Nakano; Miki Noguchi; Yukako Ohno; Takeo Kosaka

This review article presents an evaluation of the effects of local therapy on survival of breast cancer patients with distant metastases along with a discussion of their relevance. Primary and recurrent breast cancers with distant metastases are systemic diseases with poor prognosis. However, several retrospective studies have demonstrated that surgical removal of the primary breast tumor has a favorable impact on the prognosis of stage IV breast cancer patients. Similarly, it has been reported that surgical resection of metastatic lesions in the lung as well as the liver yields unexpectedly promising results. The interaction of local treatment and systemic therapy may be important, because surgery and radiotherapy are only local treatments. However, it remains uncertain whether these encouraging findings are due to the surgical procedure itself or preoperative patient selection. Only a randomized prospective study can definitively show whether local treatment can prevent death from stage IV disease or recurrent breast cancer with distant metastases. Until data from prospective studies are available, clinicians must weigh retrospective experiences and clinical judgment in deciding whether to offer surgery or radiotherapy to these patients. J. Surg. Oncol. 2012; 105:104–110.


Ejso | 2016

Feasibility study of axillary reverse mapping for patients with clinically node-negative breast cancer

Miki Noguchi; Yukako Ohno; Emi Morioka; Yasuharu Nakano; Takeo Kosaka; Nozomu Kurose; Hiroshi Minato

BACKGROUND The axillary reverse mapping (ARM) procedure was developed to identify and preserve arm lymphatic drainage during axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), thereby theoretically reducing the incidence of arm lymphedema. However, the oncological safety of this procedure has not yet been determined. METHODS Two hundred ninety-two patients with clinically negative nodes (cN0) underwent both sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy and ARM. SLN was identified by dye and gamma probe methods, and ARM nodes were identified using a fluorescence imaging system. If SLN was histologically positive, ALND was performed with removal of ARM nodes. Otherwise, identified ARM nodes were preserved unless they coincided with SLN. Postoperatively, SLN as well as ARM nodes were histologically examined with H&E staining. RESULTS SLN was identified in 286 of 292 patients, and ARM nodes were identified in 90 patients. In 54 patients with positive SLN, SLN was the same as the ARM node in 19 patients (the concordance type), whereas it was not an ARM node in the remaining 35 patients (the separate type). Non-SLN and ARM node was not involved in 51 of 54 patients with positive SLN, while it was involved in 3 patients of the concordance type. CONCLUSIONS When ARM nodes were involved in patients with cN0, these were most often the SLN-ARM nodes. Therefore, it may be concluded that ARM nodes that do not coincide with SLNs might be preserved during ALND in SLN-positive patients.


Gastric Cancer | 1999

A long surviving case of resected gastric cancer presenting with a synchronous adrenal metastasis

Takeo Kosaka; Nobuo Ueshige; Junichi Sugaya; Yasuharu Nakano; Fujio Tomita; Hitoshi Saito; Ichiro Kita; Shigeki Takashima

Clinically curable adrenal metastases are rare. We treated a patient with gastric cancer and a synchronous adrenal metastasis who underwent curative resection. Upper GI examinations of a 75-year-old man revealed a Borrmann 3 gastric tumor in the proximal stomach. CT indicated a giant gastric tumor that invaded the pancreatic tail, and the left adrenal gland seemed normal. He was subjected to a total gastrectomy and a distal pancreatosplenectomy. Because a mass was palpated intraoperatively in the left adrenal gland, it was also removed. The gastric tumor was histopathologically a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with scirrhous invasion that invaded the pancreas, and the histopathological findings of the left adrenal tumor were compatible with those of gastric cancer. At present, 6 years after the operation, there has been no clear sign of cancer recurrence. It may be rational to excise the left adrenal gland en bloc in patients with serosa-positive Borrmann 3-4 gastric cancer.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yasuharu Nakano's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Takeo Kosaka

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yukako Ohno

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Miki Noguchi

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shigeki Takashima

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masakuni Noguchi

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emi Morioka

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Junichi Sugaya

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hitoshi Saito

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nobuo Ueshige

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ichiro Kita

Kanazawa Medical University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge