Curriculum Vitaes

ミヤタ マサフミ

  (マサフミ ミヤタ)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Professor, Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Fujita Health University
Degree
博士(医学)

Contact information
m-miatafujita-hu.ac.jp
Researcher number
00387721
J-GLOBAL ID
201501018261217220
researchmap Member ID
7000012833

Research Interests

 2

Education

 2

Papers

 51
  • Yasuko Enya, Hiroyuki Hiramatsu, Masaru Ihira, Ryota Suzuki, Yuki Higashimoto, Yusuke Funato, Kei Kozawa, Hiroki Miura, Masafumi Miyata, Yoshiki Kawamura, Takuma Ishihara, Koki Taniguchi, Satoshi Komoto, Tetsushi Yoshikawa
    Fujita medical journal, 9(3) 253-258, Aug, 2023  
    OBJECTIVES: Intestinal rotavirus (RV) vaccine replication and host immune response are suggested to be affected by several factors, including maternal antibodies, breastfeeding history, and gut microbiome, which are thought to be similar in pairs of twins. The aim of this study was to determine whether viral shedding from the fecal RV vaccine strain Rotarix® (RV1) and IgG and IgA responses to RV show similarity in pairs of twins. METHODS: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction specific to RV vaccine strain RV1 was used to monitor fecal RV1 viral shedding. RV IgG and IgA titers were measured using an in-house enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Fecal RV1 viral shedding and immune responses were compared between twins and singletons with mixed effects and fixed effects models. RESULTS: A total of 347 stool and 54 blood samples were collected from four pairs of twins and twelve singletons during the observation period. Although the kinetics of fecal RV1 viral shedding and immune responses differed among vaccinated individuals, they appeared to be similar within twin pairs. RV shedding after the first dose (P=0.049) and RV IgG titers during the entire observation period (P=0.015) had a significantly better fit in the fixed effect model that assumed that twins have the same response versus the model that assumed that twins have a different response. CONCLUSIONS: The similarity of RV vaccine viral replication in intestine and host immune responses in twin pairs was demonstrated using statistical analysis.
  • Yuka Sano Wada, Yuki Tani, Jun Shindo, Masashi Miyata, Motoichirou Sakurai, Shigeru Nishimaki, Kastumi Mizuno
    Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society, 65(1) e15527, 2023  
    BACKGROUND: In Japan, the first human milk bank (HMB) was established in 2017, which changed the practice of enteral feeding in neonatal care. This study investigated the practice of enteral feeding of preterm infants after the establishment of the HMB in Japan and examined related future issues. METHODS: A survey on enteral feeding and the use of the HMB was conducted in 251 neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) from December 2020 to February 2021. RESULTS: The response rate was 61%. The ideal times to start enteral feeding for extremely-low-birthweight infants (ELBWI) and very-low-birthweight infants (VLBWI) were within 24 h after birth in approximately 59% and 62% of NICUs, however, only 30% and 46% could do so, respectively. Artificial nutrition was used to initiate enteral feeding for ELBWIs and VLBWIs in in 24% and 56% of NICUs, respectively. Of the NICUs, 92% considered the HMB "necessary" or "rather necessary". Fifty-five percent wanted to use the HMB but could not. The major reasons for this were (1) difficulty in paying the annual membership fee, (2) difficulty obtaining approval from the NICU, and (3) complexity in using the facility. The indications for using and discontinuation of use of donor milk varied among the NICUs. Only in 17%, milk expression was within 1h after delivery. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with before the establishment of the HMB, NICUs are currently more willing to start enteral feeding for preterm infants earlier. However, the implementation of enteral feeding appears to be challenging. Issues related to the HMB highlighted by the responses need to be addressed. Additionally, guidelines for using donor milk should be established.
  • Chiharuko Nakauchi, Masafumi Miyata, Shigemitsu Kamino, Yusuke Funato, Masahiko Manabe, Arisa Kojima, Yuri Kawai, Hidetoshi Uchida, Masayuki Fujino, Hiroko Boda
    Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society, 65(1) e15581, 2023  
    BACKGROUND: Few studies have compared the efficacy and complications of dexmedetomidine (DEX) and fentanyl (FEN) in extremely preterm infants. METHODS: We conducted a single-institution, retrospective controlled before and after study of preterm infants before 28 weeks of gestation admitted between April 2010 and December 2018 to compare the complications and efficacy of DEX and FEN for preterm infants. Patients were administered FEN prior to 2015 and DEX after 2015 as the first-line sedative. A composite outcome of death during hospitalization and developmental quotient (DQ) < 70 at a corrected age of 3 years was compared as the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes including postmenstrual weeks at extubation, days of age when full enteral feeding was achieved and additional sedation by phenobarbital (PB) were compared. RESULTS: Sixty-six infants were enrolled into the study. The only perinatal factor that differed between the FEN (n = 33) and DEX (n = 33) groups was weeks of gestation. The composite outcome of death and DQ < 70 at a corrected age of 3 years were not significantly different. Postmenstrual weeks at extubation did not significantly differ between groups after adjustment for weeks of gestation and being small for gestational age. On the other hand, full feeding was significantly prolonged by DEX (p = 0.031). Additional sedation was less common in the DEX group (p = 0.044). CONCLUSION: The composite outcome of death and DQ < 70 at a corrected age of 3 years were not significantly different by DEX or FEN for primary sedation. Prospective randomized controlled trials should examine the long-term effects on development.
  • Yui Shichiri, Yoshimi Kato, Hidehito Inagaki, Takema Kato, Naoko Ishihara, Masafumi Miyata, Hiroko Boda, Arisa Kojima, Misa Miyake, Hiroki Kurahashi
    Congenital anomalies, Jun 24, 2022  
    GATA4 is known to be a causative gene for congenital heart disease, but has also now been associated with disorders of sexual development (DSD). We here report a pathogenic variant of GATA4 in a 46,XY DSD patient with an atrial septal defect, identified by whole-exome sequencing to be c.487C>T (p.Pro163Ser). This mutation resulted in reduced transcriptional activity of the downstream gene. When we compared this transcriptional activity level with other GATA4 variants, those that had been identified in patients with cardiac defects and DSD showed less activity than those in patients with cardiac defect only. This suggests that the normal development of the heart requires more strict regulation of GATA4 transcription than testicular development. Further, when the different variants were co-expressed with wild-type, the transcriptional activities were consistently lower than would be expected from an additive effect, suggesting a dominant-negative impact of the variant via dimer formation of the GATA4 protein. Since these pathogenic GATA4 variants are occasionally identified in healthy parents, a threshold model of quantitative traits may explain the cardiac defect or DSD phenotypes that they cause.
  • Masahiko Manabe, Masayuki Fujino, Hirofumi Kusuki, Tsuneaki Sadanaga, Tadayoshi Hata, Hiroko Bouda, Masafumi Miyata, Tetsushi Yoshikawa
    Pediatric Cardiology, 43(8) 1792-1798, Jun 7, 2022  

Misc.

 215

Books and Other Publications

 2

Presentations

 8

Research Projects

 2