10 results on '"Miwa, Shinji"'
Search Results
2. Pathology, Diagnosis, and Management of Sarcoma.
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Miwa, Shinji, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, and Demura, Satoru
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PATHOLOGY , *DIAGNOSIS , *SARCOMA , *EWING'S sarcoma , *SOFT tissue tumors , *CHALCONE - Abstract
This document is an editorial from the International Journal of Molecular Sciences titled "Pathology, Diagnosis, and Management of Sarcoma." The editorial discusses the challenges in investigating sarcoma due to its rarity and heterogeneity. It highlights recent advancements in understanding the molecular pathogenesis of sarcomas, including molecular genetic techniques and immunohistochemical markers. The editorial also presents research on specific types of sarcomas, such as osteosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma, and explores potential therapeutic approaches for soft tissue sarcomas. Additionally, it discusses targeted protein degradation as a promising pharmacological modality for sarcoma treatment. Overall, the editorial provides valuable insights into the current understanding and management of sarcomas. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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3. Diagnosis and treatment of low-grade osteosarcoma: experience with nine cases
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Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki, Yamamoto, Norio, Shirai, Toshiharu, Nishida, Hideji, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Kimura, Hiroaki, Miwa, Shinji, Inatani, Hiroyuki, Okamoto, Hideki, Yamada, Satoshi, Ikeda, Hiroko, Sawada-Kitamura, Seiko, Nojima, Takayuki, Ooi, Akishi, and Otsuka, Takanobu
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- 2014
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4. Diagnostic accuracies of intraoperative frozen section and permanent section examinations for histological grades during open biopsy of bone tumors.
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Miwa, Shinji, Yamamoto, Norio, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Igarashi, Kentaro, Tada, Kaoru, Higuchi, Takashi, Yonezawa, Hirotaka, Morinaga, Sei, Araki, Yoshihiro, Asano, Yohei, Ikeda, Hiroko, Nojima, Takayuki, and Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki
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DIAGNOSIS , *BIOPSY , *TUMORS , *TUMOR diagnosis , *GIANT cell tumors - Abstract
Background: A histological diagnosis obtained from an intraoperative frozen section (FS) during biopsy confirms the adequacy of tumor tissue in the specimen. However, some cases show a discrepancy among the intraoperative FS diagnosis, permanent section (PS) diagnosis of the biopsy specimen, and the final diagnosis of the excised tumor specimen. In this study, we retrospectively investigated the diagnostic accuracy of the FS and PS for different types of bone tumors. Methods: This study included 377 patients with 411 bone tumors who underwent tumor excision after an open biopsy with intraoperative FS diagnosis. FS, PS, and final diagnoses of the patients were classified into benign tumors/tumor-like lesions, intermediate malignancies, and malignant tumors. To assess diagnostic accuracy, the histological grades in FS and PS diagnoses were compared with those in the final diagnoses. Results: The overall diagnostic accuracies of FS and PS were 93% and 97%, respectively. The accuracy of FS and PS for histological grade was 84% and 93% for chondrogenic tumors, 90% and 96% for osteogenic tumors, 97% and 98% for osteoclastic giant cell-rich tumors, 100% and 100% for tumors of undefined neoplastic nature, and 95% and 99% for other bone tumors, respectively. Conclusion: These data suggest that surgical planning based on PS diagnosis is recommended for chondrogenic and osteogenic tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Clinical outcomes of radio‐hyperthermo‐chemotherapy for soft tissue sarcoma compared to a soft tissue sarcoma registry in Japan: a retrospective matched‐pair cohort study.
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Aiba, Hisaki, Yamada, Satoshi, Mizutani, Jun, Yamamoto, Norio, Okamoto, Hideki, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Kimura, Hiroaki, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Miwa, Shinji, Kawai, Akira, Yoshimura, Kenichi, Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki, and Otsuka, Takanobu
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MALIGNANT hyperthermia ,SARCOMA ,CANCER treatment ,SOFT tissue tumors ,HYPERTHERMIC intraperitoneal chemotherapy ,COHORT analysis ,RADIOTHERAPY ,DIAGNOSIS ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Abstract: Regional hyperthermia is considered to enhance the antitumor effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. In this study, we confirmed the efficacy of concomitant radiotherapy, hyperthermia, and chemotherapy (RHC) for neoadjuvant treatment of malignant soft tissue sarcoma (STS). From 1994 to 2013, we performed RHC in 150 patients. This study was limited to 60 patients using the following exclusion criteria: salvage for recurrence or unplanned excision, trunk location, metastasis at initiation, non‐STS, and no definitive surgery. As a control group, we collected data from 11,031 patients in the Bone and Soft Tissue Tumor Registry in Japan (BSTT). We performed multivariate logistic regression analysis, and propensity scores were created for comparisons between groups. The primary outcome of this study was to compare oncologic outcomes (5‐year local control rate [LC] and overall survival rate [OS]). In the RHC group, two local recurrences (3.3%) occurred, and no patients underwent amputation. Margins of definitive surgery were not identical between groups [wide margins (60.0% vs. 85.3%), marginal margins (28.3% vs. 10.5%), and intralesional margins (7.4% vs. 4.2%), RHC and BSTT groups, respectively,
P < 0.001]. After adjustment, the difference in OS was not significant between groups (HR = 1.26,P = 0.532); however, a statistically significant difference in LC was observed (HR = 4.82,P = 0.037). RHC resulted in a high LC at 5 years compared to the BSTT group, and amputation was averted in the RHC group, despite the wider margins in the BSTT group. This indicates that less invasive surgery might be achieved with effective neoadjuvant therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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6. Spontaneous shrinkage of solitary osteochondromas.
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Aiba, Hisaki, Yamada, Satoshi, Yamamoto, Norio, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Miwa, Shinji, Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki, and Otsuka, Takanobu
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OSTEOCHONDROMA ,BONE tumors ,DISEASE remission ,REGRESSION analysis ,FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) ,DIAGNOSIS ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Objective: Osteochondromas are the most common benign bone tumors, and thus far, their spontaneous shrinkage is considered a rare phenomenon. This study was designed to investigate the exact ratio of remission to progressive or stable cases and analyze the mechanism of tumor regression on the basis of existing theories.Materials and Methods: We retrospectively collected images of solitary osteochondromas in patients from 1992 to 2013, excluding cases involving short-term follow-up periods and follow-up periods that ended before growth plate closure. A total of 121 patients were diagnosed and screened for study inclusion. Tumor shrinkage was measured by assessing three points on tumor contours to determine if they had regressed or vanished. Patterns of shrinkage were further divided on the basis of mechanisms described as incorporation, absorption, and fracture.Results: Seventeen patients (mean age at initial diagnosis 13.1 years) met the study inclusion criteria. Tumor morphological classifications were pedunculated (10 cases) and sessile (7 cases). Osteochondroma shrinkage was the most common outcome (8 cases), followed by stable osteochondromas (6 cases), and osteochondromas that had progressed (3 cases). Tumors with sessile morphology were more prone to shrinkage (6 of 7 cases) compared with those of pedunculated morphology (2 of 10 cases; p = 0.015). Among pedunculated cases, tumor shrinkage was via absorption. The timing of tumor growth cessation was related to the pattern of tumor shrinkage. Absorption mostly followed tumor growth cessation, whereas incorporation mostly preceded tumor growth cessation.Conclusion: The shrinkage of osteochondromas appears less rare than was originally thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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7. A validation study for the utility of serum microRNA as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in patients with osteosarcoma.
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Araki, Yoshihiro, Asano, Naofumi, Yamamoto, Norio, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Miwa, Shinji, Igarashi, Kentaro, Higuchi, Takashi, Abe, Kensaku, Taniguchi, Yuta, Yonezawa, Hirotaka, Morinaga, Sei, Asano, Yohei, Yoshida, Takeshi, Hanayama, Rikinari, Matsuzaki, Juntaro, Ochiya, Takahiro, Kawai, Akira, and Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki
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PROGNOSIS ,OSTEOSARCOMA ,PROGRESSION-free survival ,MICRORNA ,SURVIVAL rate - Abstract
In our previous study, osteosarcoma advanced locally, and metastasis was promoted through the secretion of large number of small extracellular vesicles, followed by suppressing osteoclastogenesis via the upregulation of microRNA (miR)-146a-5p. An additional 12 miRNAs in small extracellular vesicles were also detected ≥6× as frequently in high-grade malignancy with the capacity to metastasize as in those with a low metastatic potential. However, the utility of these 13 miRNAs for determining the prognosis or diagnosis of osteosarcoma has not been validated in the clinical setting. In the present study, the utility of these miRNAs as prognostic and diagnostic markers was therefore assessed. In total, 30 patients with osteosarcoma were retrospectively reviewed, and the survival rate was compared according to the serum miRNA levels in 27 patients treated with chemotherapy and surgery. In addition, to confirm diagnostic competency for osteosarcoma, the serum miRNA levels were compared with those in patients with other bone tumors (n=112) and healthy controls (n=275). The patients with osteosarcoma with high serum levels of several miRNAs (miR-146a-5p, miR-1260a, miR-487b-3p, miR-1260b and miR-4758-3p) exhibited an improved survival rate compared with those with low levels. In particular, patients with high serum levels of miR-1260a exhibited a significantly improved overall survival rate, metastasis-free survival rate and disease-free survival rate compared with those with low levels. Thus, serum miR-1260a may potentially be a prognostic marker for patients with osteosarcoma. Moreover, patients with osteosarcoma had higher serum miR-1261 levels than those with benign or intermediate-grade bone tumors and thus may be a potential therapeutic target, in addition to being useful for differentiating whether or not a bone tumor is high-grade. A larger investigation is required to clarify the actual utility of these miRNAs in the clinical setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Tenosynovial giant cell tumors in unusual locations detected by positron emission tomography imaging confused with malignant tumors: report of two cases.
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Takeuchi, Akihiko, Yamamoto, Norio, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Miwa, Shinji, Takahira, Masayuki, Fukui, Kiyokazu, Oikawa, Taku, and Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki
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GIANT cell tumors ,BENIGN tumors ,POSITRON emission tomography ,COMPUTED tomography ,CANCER ,METASTASIS ,DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis ,HIP joint ,NECK ,SOFT tissue tumors ,DISEASE complications ,NEUROFIBROMATOSIS 1 ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: A tenosynovial giant cell tumor (T-GCT) is a benign synovial tumor arising from the synovium, bursae, or tendon sheath. It can be intra- or extra-articular and localized or diffuse. Diffuse T-GCT is considered as a locally aggressive. Positron emission tomography (PET) with fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose with computed tomography (FDG PET/CT) is widely used to differentiate malignant from benign tumors and to detect distant metastasis. However, FDG PET/CT is limited by false-positive findings. In this study, we present two cases of T-GCT that developed in unusual locations and were confused with malignant tumors. The final diagnoses were histologically confirmed as T-GCTs.Case Presentation: Case 1. A 45-year-old Japanese female presented with a left choroidal melanoma and an abnormal lesion adjacent to the first cervical (C1) lamina confirmed by a PET scan (maximum standardized uptake value [SUVmax] =9.9 g/ml). MRI of the neck also detected a soft tissue mass (14.6 × 7.7 × 7 mm) adjacent to the C1 lamina. The choroidal melanoma was treated by heavy carbon ion radiotherapy. Although the size of the C1 soft tissue tumor remained unchanged, a CT-guided biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of the neck mass as a T-GCT. Case 2. A 15-year-old Japanese male with multiple type 1 neurofibromatosis presented with a soft tissue mass (26.1 × 24.7 × 11.5 mm) of the extra-articular hip joint that was coincidentally detected by FDG PET/CT during examination of a mediastinal soft tissue mass. SUVmax of the mediastinal lesion was 2.6 g/ml and of the hip lesion was 12.8 g/ml. Thus, differentiation from a malignant tumor, such as a malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, was necessary. An open biopsy was performed, and the frozen section was diagnosed as T-GCT. The tumor was excised, and the final histological diagnosis confirmed T-GCT.Conclusion: T-GCT can show high FDG uptake, which might be confused with malignancy. Although MRI findings and location might help in the diagnosis of a T-GCT, careful assessment is mandatory, especially in unusual locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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9. Successful correction of tibial bone deformity through multiple surgical procedures, liquid nitrogen-pretreated bone tumor autograft, three-dimensional external fixation, and internal fixation in a patient with primary osteosarcoma: a case report.
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Akihiko Takeuchi, Norio Yamamoto, Toshiharu Shirai, Hideji Nishida, Katsuhiro Hayashi, Koji Watanabe, Shinji Miwa, Hiroyuki Tsuchiya, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Yamamoto, Norio, Shirai, Toshiharu, Nishida, Hideji, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Watanabe, Koji, Miwa, Shinji, and Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki
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OSTEOSARCOMA ,TIBIA ,BONE abnormalities ,LIQUID nitrogen ,BONE tumors ,AUTOGRAFTS ,EXTERNAL skeletal fixation (Surgery) ,INTERNAL fixation in fractures ,PATIENTS ,THERAPEUTICS ,BONE tumor diagnosis ,BONE grafting ,CRYOPRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,FRACTURE fixation ,NITROGEN ,SPONTANEOUS fractures ,OSTEOTOMY ,REOPERATION ,DISEASE complications ,TIBIA injuries ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: In a previous report, we described a method of reconstruction using tumor-bearing autograft treated by liquid nitrogen for malignant bone tumor. Here we present the first case of bone deformity correction following a tumor-bearing frozen autograft via three-dimensional computerized reconstruction after multiple surgeries.Case Presentation: A 16-year-old female student presented with pain in the left lower leg and was diagnosed with a low-grade central tibial osteosarcoma. Surgical bone reconstruction was performed using a tumor-bearing frozen autograft. Bone union was achieved at 7 months after the first surgical procedure. However, local tumor recurrence and lung metastases occurred 2 years later, at which time a second surgical procedure was performed. Five years later, the patient developed a 19° varus deformity and underwent a third surgical procedure, during which an osteotomy was performed using the Taylor Spatial Frame three-dimensional external fixation technique. A fourth corrective surgical procedure was performed in which internal fixation was achieved with a locking plate. Two years later, and 10 years after the initial diagnosis of tibial osteosarcoma, the bone deformity was completely corrected, and the patient's limb function was good.Conclusion: We present the first report in which a bone deformity due to a primary osteosarcoma was corrected using a tumor-bearing frozen autograft, followed by multiple corrective surgical procedures that included osteotomy, three-dimensional external fixation, and internal fixation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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10. Diagnosis and treatment of intramedullary osteosclerosis: a report of three cases and literature review.
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Abe, Kensaku, Yamamoto, Norio, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Takeuchi, Akihiko, Miwa, Shinji, Igarashi, Kentaro, Higuchi, Takashi, Taniguchi, Yuta, Yonezawa, Hirotaka, Araki, Yoshihiro, Morinaga, Sei, Asano, Yohei, and Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki
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BONES ,LITERATURE reviews ,CANCELLOUS bone ,BONE shafts ,DIAGNOSIS ,FIBROUS dysplasia of bone - Abstract
Background: Intramedullary osteosclerosis (IMOS) is a rare condition without specific radiological findings except for the osteosclerotic lesion and is not associated with family history and infection, trauma, or systemic illness. Although the diagnosis of IMOS is confirmed after excluding other osteosclerotic lesions, IMOS is not well known because of its rarity and no specific feature. Therefore, these situations might result in delayed diagnosis. Hence, this case report aimed to investigate three cases of IMOS and discuss imaging findings and clinical outcomes.Case Presentation: All three cases were examined between 2015 and 2019. The location of osteosclerotic lesions were femoral diaphyses in the 60-year-old man (Case 1) and 41-year-old woman (Case 2) and tibial diaphysis in the 44-year-old woman (Case 3). All cases complained of severe pain and showed massive diaphyseal osteosclerotic lesions in plain radiograms and computed tomography (CT) scans. Cases 2 and 3 were examined using the triphasic bone scan, and a fusiform-shaped intense area of the tracer uptake on delayed bone image was detected in both cases without (Case 2) or slightly increased vascularity (Case 3) on the blood pool image, which was reported as a specific finding of IMOS. Open biopsy was performed in all cases, and histologic section showed trabecular bone sclerosis with hypocellular fibrous tissues, finally diagnosed as IMOS. The pain was sharply improved after biopsy and kept at the latest follow-up periods (34, 33, and 6 months in Cases 1, 2, and 3, respectively).Conclusions: Massive sclerotic lesions with severe pain in the diaphyseal region of long bones should be considered as IMOS to avoid the delayed diagnosis, although other sclerotic bony lesions should be carefully excluded. Triphasic bone scan with a fusiform-shaped intense area of tracer uptake on delayed bone image and without or slightly increased vascularity on the blood pool image will help confirm IMOS. The role of open biopsy was to confirm the diagnosis of IMOS and to give the severe pain relief immediately in the three cases, although more cases and long-term follow-up are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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