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Dive into the research topics where Suchin Worawichawong is active.

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Featured researches published by Suchin Worawichawong.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Up-Regulation of miR-21 Is Associated with Cervicitis and Human Papillomavirus Infection in Cervical Tissues

Sureewan Bumrungthai; Tipaya Ekalaksananan; Mark F. Evans; Peechanika Chopjitt; Thumwadee Tangsiriwatthana; Natcha Patarapadungkit; Pilaiwan Kleebkaow; Sanguanchoke Luanratanakorn; Bunkerd Kongyingyoes; Suchin Worawichawong; Chamsai Pientong

MicroRNA-21 (miR-21) is recognized as an oncomir and shows up-regulation in many types of human malignancy. The aim of this study was to investigate the association of miR-21 expression associated with HPV infection in normal and abnormal cervical tissues. Cervical tissue samples with different cytological or histopathological grades were investigated for HPV by PCR and for miR-21 and programmed cell death, protein 4 (PDCD4) expression using quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). Laser capture microdissection (LCM) of stromal and epithelial tissues and in situ hybridization (ISH) using locked nucleic acid (LNA) probes were performed on a subset of fixed specimens. Cell line experiments were conducted on fibroblasts stimulated in culture media from HeLa cells, which were then assessed for miR-21, PDCD4, IL-6 and α-SMA expression by qRT-PCR. Twenty normal cervical cell, 12 cervicitis, 14 cervical intraepithelial neoplastic I (CIN I), 22 CIN II-III and 43 cervical squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) specimens were investigated. miR-21 levels were significantly lower in normal than in abnormal tissues. The expression of miR-21 in HPV negative normal cytology was significantly lower than in HPV positive samples in abnormal tissue and SCC. The miR-21 expression was significantly higher in HPV negative cervicitis than HPV negative normal cells. LCM and ISH data showed that miR-21 is primarily expressed in the tumor-associated stromal cell microenvironment. Fibroblasts treated with HeLa cell culture media showed up-regulated expression of miR-21, which correlated with increased expression of α-SMA and IL-6 and with down-regulation of PDCD4. These results demonstrate that miR-21 is associated with HPV infection and involved in cervical lesions as well as cervicitis and its up-regulation in tumor-stroma might be involved in the inflammation process and cervical cancer progression.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2014

Significance of C1q-fixing Donor-Specific Antibodies After Kidney Transplantation

D. Thammanichanond; T. Mongkolsuk; Sasivimol Rattanasiri; Surasak Kantachuvesiri; Suchin Worawichawong; S. Jirasiritham; Pimpun Kitpoka

OBJECTIVES De novo donor-specific HLA antibodies (DSA) are associated with allograft rejection and allograft loss. However, not all DSA are equally detrimental to allograft function. The ability to activate complement may be an important factor differentiating clinically relevant DSA from nonrelevant DSA. The C1q assay detects a subset of HLA antibodies that can fix complement. This study aimed to investigate the correlation between C1q-fixing de novo DSA (dnDSA) and clinical outcomes posttransplant. METHODS This retrospective study included 193 sera from kidney transplant recipients who underwent posttransplant DSA testing and/or kidney biopsy for clinical causes. Thirty-five of the 193 (18.1%) had immunoglobulin G DSA. Seventeen of the 35 patients were excluded owing to the presence of pretransplant HLA antibodies. We then analyzed C1q DSA at the time of biopsy in 18 recipients who developed dnDSA. The clinical outcomes of patients with C1q-positive DSA and C1q-negative DSA were compared. RESULTS C1q-positive DSA were detected in 10 of 18 patients (55.6%). The incidences of transplant glomerulopathy were significantly higher among patients with C1q-positive DSA than patients with C1q-negative DSA (80% vs 0%; P = .001). Although patients with C1q-positive DSA experienced more chronic antibody-mediated rejection and graft loss (80% vs 37.5% [P = .145]; 60% vs 25% [P = .188]), the differences were not significant. The receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed that the C1q assay was an excellent predictor of transplant glomerulopathy with area under the curve of 0.9 (95% CI, 0.769-1.000). CONCLUSION The presence of C1q-positive dnDSA was associated with an increased risk of transplant glomerulopathy. The C1q assay is potentially a powerful method for identifying patients at risk for transplant glomerulopathy.


Kidney & Blood Pressure Research | 2016

Urine Epidermal Growth Factor, Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein-1 or Their Ratio as Biomarkers for Interstitial Fibrosis and Tubular Atrophy in Primary Glomerulonephritis

Supanat Worawichawong; Suchin Worawichawong; Piyanuch Radinahamed; Dittapol Muntham; Nuankanya Sathirapongsasuti; Arkom Nongnuch; Montira Assanatham; Chagriya Kitiyakara

Background/Aims: The degree of tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis (IFTA) is an important prognostic factor in glomerulonephritis. Imbalance between pro-inflammatory cytokines such as monocyte chemoattractant protein- 1 (MCP-1) and protective cytokines such as epidermal growth factor (EGF) likely determine IFTA severity. In separate studies, elevated MCP-1 and decreased EGF have been shown to be associated with IFTA severity. In this study, we aim to evaluate the predictive value of urinary EGF/MCP-1 ratio compared to each biomarker individually for moderate to severe IFTA in primary glomerulonephritis (GN). Methods: Urine samples were collected at biopsy from primary GN (IgA nephropathy, focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis, minimal change disease, membranous nephropathy). MCP-1 and EGF were analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results: EGF, MCP-1 and EGF/MCP-1 ratio from primary GN, all correlated with IFTA (n=58). By univariate analysis, glomerular filtration rate, EGF, and EGF/MCP-1 ratio were associated with IFTA. By multivariate analysis, only EGF/MCP-1 ratio was independently associated with IFTA. EGF/MCP-1 ratio had a sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 74 % for IFTA. EGF/MCP-1 had good discrimination for IFTA (AUC=0.85), but the improvement over EGF alone was not significant. Conclusion: EGF/MCP-1 ratio is independently associated IFTA severity in primary glomerulonephritis, but the ability of EGF/MCP-1 ratio to discriminate moderate to severe IFTA may not be much better than EGF alone.


Transplantation proceedings | 2012

Cytotoxic Flow Cytometric Crossmatch in Renal Transplantation: A Single Assay to Simultaneously Detect Antibody Binding and Cytotoxicity

D. Thammanichanond; W. Athimang; K. Paisooksantivatana; T. Mongkolsuk; Atiporn Ingsathit; Suchin Worawichawong; Pimpun Kitpoka; S. Jirasiritham; Surasak Kantachuvesiri

OBJECTIVES The complement-dependent lymphocytotoxicity crossmatch (CDC-XM) detects cytotoxic parameters of preformed antibodies. The flow cytometric crossmatch (FCXM) is used to detect the binding of recipient antibodies to donor cells. Because these two assays provide different information, both methods are often performed to assess the compatibility of donor-recipient pairs. The aim of this study was to develop a single assay that can simultaneously detect antibody binding and cytotoxicity. METHODS A procedure called cytotoxic flow cytometric crossmatch (cFCXM) that determines cell death and antibody binding simultaneously was developed. The assay was validated in parallel with extended incubation CDC-XM. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to determine the cut-off level. Furthermore, pretransplantation sera from seven recipients with pretransplantation donor-specific antibodies (DSA) and negative CDC-XM were retrospectively tested for cFCXM (4 without antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and three with AMR). RESULTS The optimal method for the simultaneous detection of antibody binding and cytotoxicity in a single assay has been determined. Four of four patients (100%) with pretransplantation DSA and without AMR had negative cFCXM in both parameters. Of three patients with pretransplantation DSA who developed AMR, two patients (66.7%) had positive B-cell cFCXM in both parameters, and 1 patient (33.3%) had positive T-cell cFCXM in a binding parameter only. The first patient had anti-DR9, DR53, DQ9, the second patient had anti-A11, DR12 and the last one had an anti-B46 in their pretransplantation sera. These 3 cases experienced biopsy-proven AMR after living-donor kidney transplantation. CONCLUSION The newly developed assay, cFCXM, can simultaneously determine cytoxicity and antibody binding using a single platform. Furthermore, this assay can detect clinically significant HLA alloantibodies undetectable by conventional crossmatches. The cFCXM could serve as a new tool for the detection of a recipients alloantibodies.


Transplantation proceedings | 2014

Shared Molecular Eplet Stimulates Acute Antibody-Mediated Rejection in a Kidney Transplant Recipient With Low-Level Donor-Specific Antibodies: A Case Report

T. Mongkolsuk; Atiporn Ingsathit; Suchin Worawichawong; S. Jirasiritham; Pimpun Kitpoka; D. Thammanichanond

HLA antibodies usually recognize epitopes rather than antigens. This case report reveals that acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) that occurred in a kidney transplant recipient with low-level donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) could be explained by shared epitope. A 39-year-old woman received a first kidney transplant from a deceased donor (HLA-DRB1 11:06, 12:02, DRB3 02:02, 03:01). She developed acute AMR confirmed by kidney biopsy on day 4 after transplantation. Antibody testing with pretransplant serum showed anti-DR11 DSA below cutoff level (mean fluorescence intensity [MFI], 702; cutoff >1,000). However, high-level DSAs were detected on day 5 after transplantation (anti-DR11 MFI, 8,531; anti-DR12 MFI, 3,146). We hypothesized that the sharp rise in DSA levels was a result of anamnestic response with donor-antigen sensitization that occurred during pregnancy. High-resolution HLA-DR typing of her husband showed HLA-DRB1 03:01, 15:02:01, DRB3 02:02, DRB5 01:02. No sharing between donor HLAs eliciting reactive antibodies and her husbands HLAs was detected. Nevertheless, we speculated that shared epitope, not antigen, was the cause of allosensitization. To identify the shared epitope recognized by patients antibodies, we used HLAmatchmaker, a computer algorithm that considers small configurations of polymorphic residues referred to as eplets as essential components of HLA epitopes for analysis. The results showed that 149H, which was the eplet shared by HLA-DRB1 03:01 (from her husband) and DRB1 11:06, DRB1 12:02, DRB3 03:01 (from donor), was the most prevalent eplet on DRB1 reactive alleles in Luminex assay. In conclusion, pretransplant low-level DSAs can induce AMR early after transplantation as a result of shared epitopes with a previous immunizer.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2015

High Collagen I Gene Expression as an Independent Predictor of Adverse Renal Outcomes in Lupus Nephritis Patients With Preserved Renal Function

Chiraporn Tachaudomdach; Surasak Kantachuvesiri; Suwikran Wongpraphairot; Suchin Worawichawong; Pleumjit Tankee; Suda Riengrojpitak; Chagriya Kitiyakara

CONTEXT The deposition of extracellular matrix is a major pathogenic mechanism leading to fibrosis and progressive decline in renal function in patients with lupus nephritis (LN). Currently, available clinicopathologic features cannot predict renal outcome consistently. OBJECTIVE To test that the expression of renal fibrogenic genes correlates with renal fibrosis at the time of biopsy and is predictive of renal outcomes. DESIGN Renal gene expression levels of transforming growth factor β-1 (TGFB1), and collagen I (COL1) were studied by real-time multiplex quantitative polymerase chain reaction in a prospective cohort of patients with LN (n = 39). Extracellular matrix index (ECMI) and collagen I/III matrix index were measured from Picro-Sirius Red-stained slides under normal and polarized light, respectively. RESULTS After follow-up (median, 43.9 months), renal failure (50% reduction in glomerular filtration rate [GFR] or dialysis) had developed in 13 subjects. The expression levels of renal fibrogenic genes were increased as compared to controls without LN. COL1 correlated with collagen I/III matrix index at baseline. Both high expression of TGFB1 or COL1 tended to predict renal failure by univariate analysis. By multivariate analysis, high ECMI and low GFR were predictive of renal failure. In patients with baseline GFR of 60 mL/min/1.73 m(2) or greater, high renal COL1 expression was an independent (hazard ratio = 4.4, P = .04) predictor of renal failure. CONCLUSIONS High renal COL1 expression is a strong predictor of adverse renal outcome in patients with LN and preserved baseline GFR. These findings support larger prospective studies to confirm the benefits of COL1 in identifying patients at high risk of progression to renal disease.


International Journal of Nephrology and Renovascular Disease | 2016

Independent associations of urine neutrophil gelatinase–associated lipocalin and serum uric acid with interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy in primary glomerulonephritis

Amornpan Lertrit; Suchin Worawichawong; Somlak Vanavanan; Anchalee Chittamma; Dittapol Muntham; Piyanuch Radinahamed; Aumporn Nampoon; Chagriya Kitiyakara

The degree of interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (IFTA) is one of the strongest prognostic factors in glomerulonephritis (GN). In experimental models, high serum uric acid (UA) could contribute to IFTA through direct effects on the renal tubules, but the significance of this process has not been evaluated in patients. Urine neutrophil gelatinase–associated lipocalin (NGAL) is produced by renal tubules following acute or chronic damage. We investigated the relationship between UA and NGAL excretion in primary GN and tested whether these biomarkers are independently associated with IFTA. Urine and blood were collected from patients on the day of kidney biopsy. IFTA was assessed semi-quantitatively. Fifty-one patients with primary GN were enrolled. NGAL/creatinine correlated significantly with proteinuria but not with glomerular filtration rate (GFR). By contrast, UA correlated with GFR but not with proteinuria. NGAL/creatinine did not correlate with UA. Both NGAL/creatinine and UA increased with the severity of IFTA. By multivariate analysis, GFR, NGAL/creatinine, and UA were independently associated with moderate-to-severe IFTA. Combining UA and NGAL/creatinine with classical predictors (proteinuria and GFR) tended to improve discrimination for moderate-to-severe IFTA. Findings that UA was unrelated to urinary NGAL excretion suggest that the two biomarkers reflect different pathways related to the development of IFTA in primary GN. Both NGAL/creatinine and UA were independently associated with moderate-to-severe IFTA.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2018

Acute Antibody-Mediated Rejection by De Novo Anti-HLA-DP beta and -DP alpha Antibodies after Kidney Transplantation: A Case Report

D. Thammanichanond; Watanyu Parapiboon; T. Mongkolsuk; Suchin Worawichawong; Chutima Tammakorn; Pimpun Kitpoka

The presence of isolated de novo anti-DP antibodies is uncommon, making it difficult to determine the impact of anti-DP antibodies on graft outcome. We describe a case of acute antibody-mediated rejection mediated by de novo donor-specific anti-HLA-DP antibodies. Furthermore, the generation of non-donor-specific anti-DP antibodies (NDSAs) detected in the patients sera was investigated. An 18-year-old woman with pretransplant 0% panel-reactive antibody received kidney transplantation from a living donor. She experienced combined acute T-cell-mediated and antibody-mediated rejection at 15 months after transplantation. High resolution HLA typing of the donor and the patient revealed that they were mismatched at both DPB1 (DPB1*31:01) and DPA1 (DPA1*02:02) loci. The single antigen bead (SAB) testing of patients sera revealed antibodies against donors DPB1*31:01 and DPA1*02:02 alleles. Antibodies against several non-donor-specific DP antigens were also detected. No antibodies against other HLA class I and II antigens were detected. In order to explain the reactivity pattern of NDSAs, HLAMatchmaker program was used to identify immunizing eplets shared between donor alleles and reactive beads. The analysis showed 84DEAV, a DPB1 eplet, as a shared eplet found on DPB1*31:01 (mismatched donor allele) and on DPB1-reactive alleles in SAB assay. Additionally, 50RA, a DPA1 eplet, was identified as a shared eplet found on DPA1*02:02 (mismatched donor allele) and on DPA1-reactive alleles in SAB assay. This case highlights the clinical significance of HLA-DP antibodies. Furthermore, the generation of NDSA anti-DP antibodies by epitope sharing underscores the importance of HLA-DP epitope matching in kidney transplantation.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2018

Successful Treatment of Anti–angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Antibody–Associated Rejection in Kidney Transplantation: A Case Report

Punlop Wiwattanathum; Atiporn Ingsathit; D. Thammanichanond; Suchin Worawichawong

Angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R) antibody, a non-HLA antibody, has been found to have a detrimental effect on kidney allografts. Similarly to HLA antibodies, recipients who have AT1R antibodies are at risk for allograft rejection and poor long-term graft outcome. Besides mediating allograft rejections via direct effects on endothelial and vascular smooth muscle without complement activation, AT1R antibodies may lead to accelerated hypertension via the renin-angiotensin pathway. There has been no definite level of AT1R antibody that predicts allograft rejection. Because of a low incidence of AT1R antibody-associated rejection, there are few reports on specific treatment. The results of conventional treatment, which aims to remove these pathologic antibodies similarly to the treatment of HLA antibody-associated rejection, have been unsatisfactory. Some studies recommend using angiotensin receptor blocker to attenuate the adverse effects of AT1R antibody on kidney allograft. Herein we present a kidney transplant recipient with AT1R antibody-associated refractory allograft rejection who was successfully treated with the use of steroid, plasmapheresis, intravenous immunoglobulin, and rituximab.


Transplant Infectious Disease | 2017

Absence of JC polyomavirus (JCPyV) viremia in early post-transplant JCPyV nephropathy: A case report

Chitimaporn Janphram; Suchin Worawichawong; Sinee Disthabanchong; V. Sumethkul; Porpon Rotjanapan

JC polyomavirus (JCPyV)‐associated nephropathy (JCPyVAN) occurs in <3% of PVAN cases after renal transplantation. We report the first confirmed case to our knowledge of JCPyVAN diagnosed by kidney biopsy in the early 6 months post transplant in Thailand. In this case report, recovery of renal allograft function was not observed after reduction of immunosuppressive agents and administration of intravenous immunoglobulin and cidofovir. Despite persistent JCPyV viruria, no significant further decline in allograft function was documented at 15 months post transplant.

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