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Dive into the research topics where Yasuhiro Matsubayashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yasuhiro Matsubayashi.


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2017

Impact of body mass index and metabolic phenotypes on coronary artery disease according to glucose tolerance status

Kazuya Fujihara; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; M. Yamamoto; Taeko Osawa; Masahiro Ishizawa; M. Kaneko; Satoshi Matsunaga; Kiminori Kato; H. Seida; N. Yamanaka; Satoru Kodama; Hirohito Sone

OBJECTIVE This study aimed to examine the impact of obesity, as defined by body mass index (BMI), and a metabolically unhealthy phenotype on the development of coronary artery disease (CAD) according to glucose tolerance status. METHODS This population-based retrospective cohort study included 123,746 Japanese men aged 18-72years (normal glucose tolerance: 72,047; prediabetes: 39,633; diabetes: 12,066). Obesity was defined as a BMI≥25kg/m2. Metabolically unhealthy individuals were defined as those with one or more of the following conditions: hypertension, hypertriglyceridaemia and/or low HDL cholesterol. A Cox proportional hazards regression model identified variables related to CAD incidence. RESULTS The prevalences of obese subjects with normal glucose tolerance, prediabetes and diabetes were 21%, 34% and 53%, whereas those for metabolically unhealthy people were 43%, 60% and 79%, respectively. Multivariate analysis showed that a metabolically unhealthy phenotype increases hazard ratios (HRs) for CAD compared with a metabolically healthy phenotype, regardless of glucose tolerance status (normal glucose tolerance: 1.98, 95% CI: 1.32-2.95; prediabetes: 2.91, 95% CI: 1.85-4.55; diabetes: 1.90, 95% CI: 1.18-3.06). HRs for CAD among metabolically unhealthy non-obese diabetes patients and obese diabetes patients with a metabolically unhealthy status were 6.14 (95% CI: 3.94-9.56) and 7.86 (95% CI: 5.21-11.9), respectively, compared with non-obese subjects with normal glucose tolerance and without a metabolically unhealthy status. CONCLUSION A metabolically unhealthy state can associate with CAD independently of obesity across all glucose tolerance stages. Clinicians may need to consider those with at least one or more conditions indicating a metabolically unhealthy state as being at high risk for CAD regardless of glucose tolerance status.


Obesity Reviews | 2018

Network meta-analysis of the relative efficacy of bariatric surgeries for diabetes remission: Network meta-analysis of bariatric surgeries

Satoru Kodama; Kazuya Fujihara; Chika Horikawa; M. Harada; Hajime Ishiguro; M. Kaneko; Kazuo Furukawa; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Satoshi Matsunaga; Hitoshi Shimano; Shiro Tanaka; Kiminori Kato; Hirohito Sone

Bariatric surgery leads to a higher remission rate for type 2 diabetes mellitus than non‐surgical treatment. However, it remains unsolved which surgical procedure is the most efficacious. This network meta‐analysis aimed to rank surgical procedures in terms of diabetes remission.


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2018

Association of treatment-achieved HbA1c with incidence of coronary artery disease and severe eye disease in diabetes patients

M. Harada; Kazuya Fujihara; Taeko Osawa; M. Yamamoto; M. Kaneko; Masahiro Ishizawa; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Takaho Yamada; N. Yamanaka; H. Seida; Satoru Kodama; W. Ogawa; Hirohito Sone

AIM To examine the association between treatment-achieved HbA1c values and incidence of both coronary artery disease (CAD) and severe eye disease with different diabetes treatments. METHODS Associations of treatment-achieved HbA1c were investigated in various treatment groups [diet only; insulin; sulphonylurea (SU) alone; SU with glinides; and antihyperglycaemic agents other than glinides, SU or insulin] taken from a nationwide claims database of 14,633 Japanese diabetes patients. Coxs regression analysis examined risks over a 5.1-year follow-up. RESULTS A significant linear trend was associated with HbA1c levels and CAD events in the diet-only group, and CAD risks were significantly higher in insulin and SU groups with HbA1c ≤ 7.0% and > 8.0% than in the diet-only group with HbA1c ≤ 7.0%. In contrast to CAD, a linear association was observed regardless of treatment modality between achieved HbA1c levels and risk of severe diabetic eye disease, but with no significant difference in eye disease risk between groups with HbA1c ≤ 7.0% and 7.1-8.0% in those treated with either SU alone, SU with glinides, or insulin. CONCLUSION These findings suggest that the relationship between treatment-achieved HbA1c and incidence of both CAD and severe diabetic eye disease differed according to treatment, based on a large-scale real-life database. More research is now needed to confirm these findings and to further investigate the underlying mechanisms.


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2017

Role of fatty liver in the association between obesity and reduced hepatic insulin clearance

Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; A. Yoshida; H. Suganami; Hajime Ishiguro; M. Yamamoto; Kazuya Fujihara; Satoru Kodama; Shiro Tanaka; Kohei Kaku; Hirohito Sone

AIM Hepatic insulin clearance (HIC) is important in regulating plasma insulin levels. Diminished HIC causes inappropriate hyperinsulinaemia, and both obesity and fatty liver (FL), which are known to decrease HIC, can be found either together in the same patient or on their own. The mechanism by which obesity reduces HIC is presumed to be mediated by FL. However, few reports have examined the role of FL in the relationship between obesity and HIC in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. Therefore, our study investigated the association of HIC with clinical factors, including insulin sensitivity indices, focusing on the presence or absence of FL and obesity in T2D patients. METHOD Baseline data from 419 patients with T2D (279 men, 140 women; mean age: 57.6 years; body mass index: 25.5kg/m2) controlled by diet and exercise were analyzed. HIC was calculated from the ratio of fasting c-peptide to fasting insulin levels (HICCIR). Correlation analyses between HICCIR and clinical variables were performed using Pearsons product-moment correlation coefficients and single regression analysis in all participants and in those with obesity and FL either alone or in combination. RESULTS HICCIR was significantly correlated with whole-body insulin sensitivity indices and influenced by FL, but only in the FL group was obesity independently influenced HIC level. HICCIR decreased in those with both FL and obesity compared with those with only one such complication. CONCLUSION HICCIR may be used to evaluate whole-body insulin sensitivity in T2D. Also, compared with obesity, the influence of FL strongly contributed to a reduced HIC. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER These trials were registered by the Japan Pharmaceutical Information Centre clinical trials information (JapicCTI) as 101349 and 101351.


Preventive Medicine | 2016

Utility of nonblood-based risk assessment for predicting type 2 diabetes mellitus: A meta-analysis

Sakiko Yoshizawa; Satoru Kodama; Kazuya Fujihara; Hajime Ishiguro; Masahiro Ishizawa; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Satoshi Matsunaga; Takaho Yamada; Hitoshi Shimano; Kiminori Kato; Osamu Hanyu; Hirohito Sone

OBJECTIVE Nonblood-based risk assessment for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) that depends on data based on a questionnaire and anthropometry is expected to avoid unnecessary diagnostic testing and overdiagnosis due to blood testing. This meta-analysis aims to assess the predictive ability of nonblood-based risk assessment for future incident T2DM. METHODS Electronic literature search was conducted using EMBASE and MEDLINE (from January 1, 1997 to October 1, 2014). Included studies had to use at least 3 predictors for T2DM risk assessment and allow reproduction of 2×2 contingency table data (i.e., true positive, true negative, false positive, false negative) to be pooled with a bivariate random-effects model and hierarchical summary receiver-operating characteristic model. Considering the importance of excluding individuals with a low likelihood of T2DM from diagnostic blood testing, we especially focused on specificity and LR-. RESULTS Eighteen eligible studies consisting of 184,011 participants and 7038 cases were identified. The pooled estimates (95% confidence interval) were as follows: sensitivity=0.73 (0.66-0.79), specificity=0.66 (0.59-0.73), LR+=2.13 (1.81-2.50), and LR-=0.41 (0.34-0.50). CONCLUSIONS Nonblood-based assessment of risk of T2DM could produce acceptable results although the feasibility of such a screener needs to be determined in future studies.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2014

Reversible brain atrophy and cognitive impairment in an adolescent Japanese patient with primary adrenal Cushing's syndrome.

Nobumasa Ohara; Hiroshi Suzuki; Akiko Suzuki; Masanori Kaneko; Masahiro Ishizawa; Kazuo Furukawa; Takahiro Abe; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Takaho Yamada; Osamu Hanyu; Takayoshi Shimohata; Hirohito Sone

Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome is an endocrine disease resulting from chronic exposure to excessive glucocorticoids produced in the adrenal cortex. Although the ultimate outcome remains uncertain, functional and morphological brain changes are not uncommon in patients with this syndrome, and generally persist even after resolution of hypercortisolemia. We present an adolescent patient with Cushing’s syndrome who exhibited cognitive impairment with brain atrophy. A 19-year-old Japanese male visited a local hospital following 5 days of behavioral abnormalities, such as money wasting or nighttime wandering. He had hypertension and a 1-year history of a rounded face. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed apparently diffuse brain atrophy. Because of high random plasma cortisol levels (28.7 μg/dL) at 10 AM, he was referred to our hospital in August 2011. Endocrinological testing showed adrenocorticotropic hormone-independent hypercortisolemia, and abdominal computed tomography demonstrated a 2.7 cm tumor in the left adrenal gland. The patient underwent left adrenalectomy in September 2011, and the diagnosis of cortisol-secreting adenoma was confirmed histologically. His hypertension and Cushingoid features regressed. Behavioral abnormalities were no longer observed, and he was classified as cured of his cognitive disturbance caused by Cushing’s syndrome in February 2012. MRI performed 8 months after surgery revealed reversal of brain atrophy, and his subsequent course has been uneventful. In summary, the young age at onset and the short duration of Cushing’s syndrome probably contributed to the rapid recovery of both cognitive dysfunction and brain atrophy in our patient. Cushing’s syndrome should be considered as a possible etiological factor in patients with cognitive impairment and brain atrophy that is atypical for their age.


Medicine | 2017

Comparison of baseline characteristics and clinical course in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes among whom different types of oral hypoglycemic agents were chosen by diabetes specialists as initial monotherapy (JDDM 42)

Kazuya Fujihara; Risa Igarashi; Satoshi Matsunaga; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Takaho Yamada; Hiroki Yokoyama; Shiro Tanaka; Hitoshi Shimano; Hiroshi Maegawa; Katsuya Yamazaki; Koichi Kawai; Hirohito Sone


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2017

Predictors of the response of HbA1c and body weight after SGLT2 inhibition

Takahiro Abe; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; A. Yoshida; H. Suganami; T. Nojima; Taeko Osawa; Masahiro Ishizawa; M. Yamamoto; Kazuya Fujihara; Shiro Tanaka; Kohei Kaku; Hirohito Sone


Diabetes | 2018

Dipstick Proteinuria as a Predictor of End-Stage Renal Disease in Japanese Adults With and Without Diabetes Mellitus (DM)

Atsushi Furuya; Kazuya Fujihara; Taeko Osawa; M. Yamamoto; Mayuko Harada; Masahiro Ishizawa; Hiroyasu Seida; Nauta Yamanaka; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Hirohito Sone


Diabetes | 2018

Impact of Prior Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) and Glucose Tolerance Status (GTS) on Incident CAD in Japanese Men

Masaru Kitazawa; Kazuya Fujihara; Mayuko Harada; Masahiro Ishizawa; M. Yamamoto; Masanori Kaneko; Taeko Osawa; Takaho Yamada; Yasuhiro Matsubayashi; Hirohito Sone

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