Tomoko Usui
University of Tokyo
20 Papers
25 Citations
Tomoko Usui is an academic researcher from University of Tokyo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Kidney disease. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 19 publications. Previous affiliations of Tomoko Usui include Kyoto University.
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Papers
Guidelines for clinical evaluation of chronic kidney disease : AMED research on regulatory science of pharmaceuticals and medical devices.
Eiichiro Kanda,Naoki Kashihara,Kunihiro Matsushita,Tomoko Usui,Hirokazu Okada,Kunitoshi Iseki,Kenichi Mikami,Tetsuhiro Tanaka,Takashi Wada,Hirotaka Watada,Kohjiro Ueki,Masaomi Nangaku +11 more
TL;DR: The aim of the project is to enable appropriate and prompt approval review of newly developed drugs without discrepancy from international criteria based on evidence for Japanese CKD patients.
Observation period for changes in proteinuria and risk prediction of end-stage renal disease in general population.
TL;DR: Proteinuria is known to be an independent risk factor of end‐stage renal disease (ESRD), but the associations between changes in dipstick proteinuria and the risk of ESRD in the general population is unknown.
22
Persistence of and switches from teriparatide treatment among women and men with osteoporosis in the real world: a claims database analysis
TL;DR: Monitoring persistence and considering subsequent drugs for osteoporosis are necessary for teriparatide treatment, and improvement in persistence and switches are desired.
19
Distribution and Characteristics of Hypouricemia within the Japanese General Population: A Cross-Sectional Study
Shin Kawasoe,Kazuki Ide,Tomoko Usui,Takuro Kubozono,Shiro Yoshifuku,Hironori Miyahara,Shigeho Maenohara,Mitsuru Ohishi,Koji Kawakami +8 more
TL;DR: The characteristics of the individuals in the lower and higher hypouricemia groups differed significantly, indicating different pathophysiologies within each group.
18
Correlation between dental conditions and comorbidities in an elderly Japanese population: A cross-sectional study.
TL;DR: Findings indicate that dental health could represent a markers of impending dementia, and probably represent a marker of general health status in the elderly population in Japan, and the number of decayed teeth was associated with dementia.
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