H
Hideaki Tsukuma
Researcher at Osaka University
Publications - 134
Citations - 6632
Hideaki Tsukuma is an academic researcher from Osaka University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 134 publications receiving 6165 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer survival in five continents: a worldwide population-based study (CONCORD)
Michel P Coleman,Manuela Quaresma,F Berrino,Jean-Michel Lutz,Roberta De Angelis,Riccardo Capocaccia,Paolo Baili,Bernard Rachet,Gemma Gatta,Timo Hakulinen,Andrea Micheli,Milena Sant,Hannah K. Weir,J. Mark Elwood,Hideaki Tsukuma,Sergio Koifman,Gulnar Azevedo e Silva,Silvia Francisci,Mariano Santaquilani,Arduino Verdecchia,Hans H. Storm,John L. Young +21 more
TL;DR: This is, to the authors' knowledge, the first worldwide analysis of cancer survival, with standard quality-control procedures and identical analytic methods for all datasets, and should eventually facilitate joint assessment of international trends in incidence, survival, and mortality as indicators of cancer control.
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Relationship between the duration of the preoperative smoke-free period and the incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications after pulmonary surgery.
TL;DR: It is indicated that preoperative smoking abstinence of at least 4 weeks is necessary for patients who undergo pulmonary surgery, to reduce the incidence of PPCs.
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Natural history of early gastric cancer: a non-concurrent, long term, follow up study
TL;DR: Although EGC showed a relatively long natural history in general, it progressed to the advanced stage with time and led to death from gastric cancer for the most part if left untreated.
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Population-based Survival of Cancer Patients Diagnosed Between 1993 and 1999 in Japan: A Chronological and International Comparative Study
TL;DR: The study suggests an improvement in cancer survival in several primary sites in Japan, which is consistent with the development of treatments and early detection.
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Cancer risk after renal transplantation in Japan
Yoshihiko Hoshida,Hideaki Tsukuma,Yutaka Yasunaga,Ning Xu,Masaki Q. Fujita,Takaomi Satoh,Yasuji Ichikawa,Kenji Kurihara,Masaaki Imanishi,Tsuyoshi Matsuno,Katsuyuki Aozasa +10 more
TL;DR: The findings showed the excess risk of malignancies in Japan with renal transplants, especially in male patients, similar to that observed in Western countries, though the types ofmalignancy were different.