Sukehito, Prince Kan'in (, 1 April 1733 â 1 August 1794), posthumously named Emperor Kyà Âkà  (), was the second head of the Kan'in House, a branch of the imperial family. He was the grandson of Emperor Higashiyama and father of Emperor Kà Âkaku.
Sukehito, also named Hisanomiya () in his childhood, was the third son of Naohito, Prince Kan'in (). He was appointed as a yuushi () of, or one of the heirs to, his cousin Emperor Sakuramachi on 12 March 1742, and was proclaimed prince on 4 September 1743. Five years after coming of age, Sukehito married Fusako, Princess Kazu (), fifth daughter of Emperor Nakamikado in 1749. He succeeded as Prince Kan'in and as the head of the house in 1753 after his father died.
As a result of the death of heirless Emperor Go-Momozono, Morohito, son of Sukehito with his concubine à Âe Iwashiro, ascended the throne as Emperor Kà Âkaku in 1779. A year later, the new monarch promoted his father as the first amongst the princes, and continued in seeking to elevate him. In 1789, Kà Âkaku attempted to bestow the title of retired emperor, or Daijà  Tennà Â, on him, but the chief senior councillor Matsudaira Sadanobu objected. As a concession, Kà Âkaku raised the Kokudaka of Sukehito after abandoning the idea in 1792. The row between the nobleman and the emperor, however, was one of the factors that contributed the downfall of Sadanobu.
Sukehito died on 1 August 1794, at the age of 61, and was buried in the Imperial Mausoleum of Emperor Kyà Âkà  in Kamigyà Â-ku, Kyoto. His eldest son, Prince Yoshihito (), succeeded the title of Prince Kan'in.
In 1884, 90 years after his death, Marquess Nakayama Tadayasu, maternal grandfather of Emperor Meiji, proposed bestowing a posthumous title upon the late prince. In March, Sukehito was posthumously conferred the imperial title of Emperor Kyà Âkà Â, which was required as a result of the abolishment of the retiring title in the Meiji era, before formally bestowing the imperial title of Daijà  Tennà  by Meiji. He was therefore also recognised as Keikoin ().