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Yusuke Okuma

3-18-22, Honkomagome, Bunkyo, Tokyo, JAPAN
y-okuma@cick.jp

Journal articles

2011
Yusuke Okuma, Yukio Hosomi, Yusuke Takagi, Mari Iguchi, Tatsuru Okamura, Masahiko Shibuya (2011)  Cisplatin and Irinotecan combination chemotherapy for advanced thymic carcinoma: evaluation of efficacy and toxicity   Lung Cancer  
Abstract: Abstract: Background: Thymic carcinoma is a rare, malignant mediastinal tumor that is definitively distinguished from thymoma by its wide extensiveness and poor prognosis. At present, cisplatin-based triplet or quartet chemotherapy with the second generation antitumor drugs, referred to as Einhorn's protocol for germ cell tumors, is used as first-line chemotherapy for advanced thymic carcinoma, though an optimal chemotherapeutic regimen has not yet been established. In this retrospective study, the effectiveness and toxicity of cisplatin and irinotecan combination treatment were evaluated over a nine-year period. Patients and methods: Patients with advanced thymic carcinoma who were treated with cisplatin and irinotecan combination treatment between January 1, 2002 and December 31, 2010, were retrospectively identified from our database and medical records. The endpoints in this study were disease control, response rate, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS). Significant hematological and non-hematological toxicities were also assessed. Results: Among identified nine patients, disease control was achieved in 8 patients (88.9%), and a clinical response was achieved in 5 (55.6%). The median PFS was 7.9 months, and the median OS was 33.8 months. One- and two-year OS were 77.7% and 55.6%, respectively. Grade 3/4 hematological toxicities were observed in 2 patients (22.2%), and Grade 3/4 non-hematological toxicities were seen in 2 patients (22.2%). No febrile neutropenia or toxic death was recorded. Conclusion: Cisplatin and irinotecan combination treatment appears to be acceptable for advanced thymic carcinoma as first-line chemotherapy with respect to efficacy, toxicity, and usage in the clinical setting.
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Yusuke Okuma, Naoki Yanagisawa, Yusuke Takagi, Yukio Hosomi, Akihiko Suganuma, Akifumi Imamura, Mari Iguchi, Tatsuru Okamura, Atsushi Ajisawa, Masahiko Shibuya (2011)  Clinical Characteristics of Japanese Lung Cancer Patients with HIV infection   International Journal of Clinical Oncology  
Abstract: Background: Lung cancer has emerged as a crucial problem among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, contributing to significant mortality in Western countries. Japan is a country with an increasing number of newly infected HIV patients. However, clinical characteristics of lung cancer have not been well investigated in Asian populations with HIV. Patients and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients diagnosed with HIV and lung cancer simultaneously in our institution between 1985 and 2010. Data regarding HIV status, characteristics, treatment, and prognosis of lung cancer were evaluated. Results: We identified 13 consecutive patients (all men; mean age, 59.0±10.2 years) since 1985; 7 of whom were diagnosed since 2008. Mean CD4 count was 332±159 cells/µL, and HIV viral loads were undetectable in 8 patients (61.5%) when lung cancer was diagnosed. The mean latency for lung cancer from HIV diagnosis was 4.0 years. Histological examination demonstrated adenocarcinoma in 9 patients (69.2%), followed by squamous cell carcinoma (23.1%), and small cell carcinoma (8.7%). Among the 7 patients available for examination, 2 patients (29%) harbored EGFR mutation. Six patients had stage IA-IIIA, and 7 patients had stage IIIB/IV. Among the 6 patients treated with chemotherapy for unresectable stage, 5 patients (88.3%) achieved partial response. Median overall survival was 17 months for all stages and 14 months for advanced stages. Toxicities for treatment modalities were largely acceptable. Conclusions: Clinical characteristics of Japanese HIV-infected patients with lung cancer are similar to those of Western populations. Prognosis for patients in the metastatic stages was better previously reported.
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2010
Takuya Kaminuma, Katsuyuki Karasawa, Nahoko Hanyu, Ta-Chen Chang, Gencho Kuga, Naoko Okano, Nobuteru Kubo, Yusuke Okuma, Yasunobu Nagata, Yoshiharu Maeda, Atsushi Ajisawa (2010)  Acute Adverse Effects of Radiation Therapy on HIV-positive Patients in Japan: Study of 31 Cases at Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital   Journal of Radiation Research 51: 6. 749-753  
Abstract: Recently, the number of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) -positive patients has increased in Japan. HIV-positive patients are at a higher risk of cancer than the general population. This paper retrospectively reports the acute adverse effects of radiation therapy on HIV-positive patients who were treated at Tokyo Metropolitan Cancer and Infectious diseases Center Komagome Hospital (TMCICK). Thirty-one cases involving 24 HIV-positive cancer patients who were treated at TMCICK from January 1997 to March 2009 were included in this study. All acute adverse effects of radiation therapy were examined during, and one month after, the last radiation therapy session. Acute adverse effects were classified according to the site of radiation therapy treatment and analyzed using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0. Grade 3 acute adverse effects were seen in 17% of cases, and Grade 2 toxicities were found in 23% of patients. Damage to the skin and mucosa, including stomatitis or diarrhea, tended to occur after low-dose radiation therapy; however, no severe acute adverse effects were seen in other organs, such as the brain, lung, and bone. Acute adverse effects tended to occur earlier in HIV-positive patients and became severe more frequently than in the general population. In particular, disorders of the mucosa, such as those of the oral cavity, pharynx, and intestine, tended to occur rapidly. It was shown that radiation therapy is safe when treatment is performed carefully and that it is a very useful treatment for cancer in HIV-positive patients.
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Yusuke Okuma, Tsuneo Shimokawa, Yusuke Takagi, Yukio Hosomi, Mari Iguchi, Tatsuru Okamura, Masahiko Shibuya (2010)  S-1 is an active anticancer agent for advanced thymic carcinoma   Lung Cancer 70: 3. 357-363  
Abstract: Background: Thymic carcinoma is a rare intrathoracic malignant tumor, and the prognosis for patients with advanced stage of the disease is poor. However, no definitive chemotherapeutic regimen has been established for advanced thymic carcinoma in front-line settings. The efficacy and benefit of second-line or salvage chemotherapy are also unknown, as few cases or case series have been reported. Patients and methods: We evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of S-1 monotherapy with S-1, a novel oral fluoropyrimidine agent, as salvage therapy in four consecutive patients with previously treated advanced thymic carcinoma from January, 2008 to May, 2010. Results:Twopatients achieved stable disease, and two achieved partial response. Median progression-free survival was 8.1 months. Hematological toxicity was mild, but gastrointestinal toxicity led to discontinuation in two of four patients. Conclusions: We concluded that oral S-1 monotherapy is useful as second-line or later chemotherapy in previously treated patients with advanced thymic carcinoma and is a potential alternative choice for patients who cannot tolerate platinum-containing treatments.
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Yusuke Okuma, Yukio Hosomi, Yusuke Takagi, Shingo Miyamoto, Tsuneo Shimokawa, Mari Iguchi, Tatsuru Okamura, Kuniaki Saito, Masahiko Shibuya (2010)  Long-term survival following metachronous intratumoral hemorrhage in an HIV-infected patient with lung cancer   International Journal of Clnical Oncology 15: 4. 515-518 October  
Abstract: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients are likely to develop intracranial events. Due to the spread of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), HIV-infected patients now survive longer, and metastatic non-AIDS-defining carcinoma is increasing. A 49-year-old man with HIV infection undergoing treatment with HAART developed an intratumoral hemorrhage in the right frontal lobe. He was diagnosed as having lung adenocarcinoma and was found to have a brain metastasis with bleeding. After treatment for intratumoral bleeding, a contralateral frontal lobe hemorrhage occurred within a month. The patient underwent a second craniotomy and removal of hematoma, followed by whole-brain radiotherapy. He was then treated with four cycles of cisplatin and gemcitabine combination chemotherapy while receiving HAART. A partial response was achieved, though he developed severe hematological toxicities for which the doses of chemotherapy needed to be decreased. However, as a result of treatment, his activities of daily life recovered gradually. This lung cancer patient had been alive for 17 months despite the coexistence of two disorders with a poor prognosis, HIV infection and bleeding brain metastases from lung cancer. This case revealed that physicians must include non-AIDS-defining cancer metastasis to the brain in the differential diagnosis of HIV-infected patients when they show stroke-like symptoms, and such patients may respond to treatment as well as non-HIV-infected patients with advanced lung cancer.
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2009
Yusuke Okuma, Kiminori Kimura, Shunichi Saeki, Tsunekazu Hishima, Seishu Hayashi (2009)  A case of polymyositis in a chronic hepatitis C patient treated with peg-interferon-alpha 2b and ribavirin therapy   Clinical Journal of Gastroenterology 2: 5. 346-350  
Abstract: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection may result in progression to chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Interferon-based treatment in patients with chronic hepatitis C may achieve viral clearance, and as a consequence improve liver histology and prevent progression to hepatocellular carcinoma. At present, the recommended therapy for chronic hepatitis C is peg-interferon-alpha (PEG-IFN-α) in conjunction with the oral nucleoside analog ribavirin. In the current study, we report a case of polymyositis associated with chronic hepatitis C following PEG-IFN-α and ribavirin therapy. The patient, a 64-year-old female who was treated with combination therapy, demonstrated elevated serum CPK, AST, ALT and LDH levels at 28 weeks after treatment onset. As there was an elevation of the serum HCV-RNA levels, combination treatment was ceased at 24 weeks. The patient had received IFN therapy twice previously (IFN-α 2a and IFN-α 2b with ribavirin therapy); however, no adverse side effects were observed. Further laboratory examination, muscle biopsy and imaging data suggested polymyositis, possibly triggered by the PEG-IFN-α treatment. The patient was subsequently administered prednisolone and the dose tapered over 7 months. As a result the polymyositis has remained in remission. Although many autoimmune diseases have been associated with IFN therapy, the development of polymyositis is extremely rare.
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Yusuke Okuma, Yukio Hosomi, Kazuhiro Kitamura, Mari Iguchi, Tatsuru Okamura, Shin Fukami, Tsunekazu Hishima, Masahiko Shibuya (2009)  Choroidal metastasis in a patient with small cell lung cancer discovered during treatment with chemotherapy   International Journal of Clinical Oncology 14: 541-544  
Abstract: A 56-year-old male patient complaining of productive cough, hoarseness, and fatigue was found to have extensive disease of small cell lung cancer (ED-SCLC), with staging of cT4N3M1(PUL). He was treated with chemotherapy. While undergoing treatment with chemotherapy, he complained of a right visual disturbance, and choroidal metastasis was diagnosed. Because the primary site responded well to chemotherapy alone and the visual disturbance did not worsen, the patient refused radiotherapy to the choroidal metastasis. Two months after the first diagnosis of the choroidal metastasis, while he was receiving the first treatment regimen for SCLC, the visual disturbance suddenly worsened; emergent radiotherapy was started, with a total dose of 40 Gy, given as 2.0 Gy/fraction per day. The visual disturbance never improved, and the patient lost 80% of his right visual field. Within 6 months of diagnosis, the patient became blind in his right eye. The patient died of septic shock related to treatment received during his third chemotherapy regimen. Choroidal metastasis is very rare with extraocular malignant tumors, though it is common with intraocular malignant tumors. Choroidal metastasis secondary to SCLC has a poor prognosis, but in order to maintain quality of life during the patients’ remaining lifespan, aggressive treatment would appear appropriate for these patients, because SCLC is a chemo-sensitive cancer.
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Book chapters

2011
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