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Dive into the research topics where Stefan Kommoss is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan Kommoss.


The Journal of Pathology | 2013

Molecular characterization of mucinous ovarian tumours supports a stratified treatment approach with HER2 targeting in 19% of carcinomas

Michael S. Anglesio; Stefan Kommoss; Mary Catherine Tolcher; Blaise Clarke; Laura Galletta; Henry Porter; Sambasivarao Damaraju; Sian Fereday; Boris Winterhoff; Steve E. Kalloger; Janine Senz; Winnie Yang; Helen Steed; Ghassan Allo; Sarah E. Ferguson; Patricia Shaw; Attila Teoman; Joaquin J. Garcia; John K. Schoolmeester; Jamie N. Bakkum-Gamez; Anna V. Tinker; David Bowtell; David Huntsman; C. Blake Gilks; Jessica N. McAlpine

Mucinous ovarian carcinomas (MCs) typically do not respond to current conventional therapy. We have previously demonstrated amplification of HER2 in 6 of 33 (18.2%) mucinous ovarian carcinomas (MCs) and presented anecdotal evidence of response with HER2‐targeted treatment in a small series of women with recurrent HER2‐amplified (HER2+) MC. Here, we explore HER2 amplification and KRAS mutation status in an independent cohort of 189 MCs and 199 mucinous borderline ovarian tumours (MBOTs) and their association to clinicopathological features. HER2 status was assessed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), FISH, and CISH, and interpreted per ASCO/CAP guidelines, with intratumoural heterogeneity assessment on full sections, where available. KRAS mutation testing was performed with Sanger sequencing. Stage and grade were associated with recurrence on both univariate and multivariate analysis (p < 0.001). Assessment of HER2 status revealed overexpression/amplification of HER2 in 29/154 (18.8%) MCs and 11/176 (6.2%) MBOTs. There was excellent agreement between IHC, FISH, and CISH assessment of HER2 status (perfect concordance of HER2 0 or 1+ IHC with non‐amplified status, and 3+ IHC with amplified status). KRAS mutations were seen in 31/71 (43.6%) MCs and 26/33 (78.8%) MBOTs, and were near mutually exclusive of HER2 amplification. In the 189 MC cases, a total of 54 recurrences and 59 deaths (53 of progressive disease) were observed. Within MCs, either HER2 amplification/overexpression or KRAS mutation was associated with decreased likelihood of disease recurrence (p = 0.019) or death (p = 0.0041) when compared to cases with neither feature. Intratumoural heterogeneity was noted in 26% of HER2‐overexpressing cases. These data support the stratification of MCs for the testing of new treatments, with HER2‐targeted therapy as a viable option for HER2+ advanced or recurrent disease. Further research is required to delineate the molecular and clinical features of the ∼34% of MC cases with neither HER2 amplification nor KRAS mutations.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2011

Impact of a structured quality management program on surgical outcome in primary advanced ovarian cancer.

Philipp Harter; Zelal M. Muallem; C. Buhrmann; Dietmar Lorenz; Christine Kaub; Rita Hils; Stefan Kommoss; Florian Heitz; Alexander Traut; Andreas du Bois

OBJECTIVE Surgical outcome in advanced ovarian cancer (AOC) is an important prognostic factor and the only factor amendable to improvement by optimization. Therefore, introduction of quality management programs (QM) regarding the surgical therapy in ovarian cancer may help to improve outcome. METHODS We introduced a specific ovarian cancer quality management program in 2001 in our gynecologic oncology center. Analysis of 396 consecutive patients with primary surgery for advanced ovarian cancer FIGO stages IIB-IV operated before the introduction of the quality management program 1997-2000, or during the introduction years 2001-2003, or after establishing 2004-2008. RESULTS Thirty-three percent had complete debulking to no macroscopic residual disease from 1997 to 2000. This rate increased to 47% in 2001-2003 (n = 86) and 62% in 2004-2008 (n = 259). The utilization of extended surgical procedures increased over time. Patients with complete resection had 5-YSR of 55% compared to 16% in patients with residuals 1-10 mm, and 13% in patients with residuals >1 cm (p < 0.001). The median OS increased from 26 months 1997-2000 to 37 months 2001-2003 and 45 months in 2004-2008 (p < 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Optimizing surgical skills, infrastructure, and introduction of quality management programs may improve both surgical and overall outcome in advanced ovarian cancer.


The Journal of Pathology | 2010

The biological and clinical value of p53 expression in pelvic high‐grade serous carcinomas

Martin Köbel; Alexander Reuss; Andreas du Bois; Stefan Kommoss; Friedrich Kommoss; Dongxia Gao; Steve E. Kalloger; David Huntsman; C. Blake Gilks

Studies on the p53 expression and outcome for women with ovarian carcinoma have produced conflicting results. The observed heterogeneity may be due to the range of cut‐offs used to define overexpression and the mix of histotypes of the study cohorts. We aimed to examine the association between p53 expression and biological properties of tumours as well as outcome in 502 pelvic high‐grade serous carcinomas (HGSCs) derived from two population‐based cohorts from British Columbia representing cases with or without residual tumour after initial surgery, respectively, and one clinical trial cohort from Germany (AGO‐OVAR‐3). p53 expression was assessed on tissue microarrays by immunohistochemistry using the DO‐7 antibody. p53 expression was scored in three tiers as complete loss of expression, focal expression or overexpression (defined as more than 50% positive tumour cell nuclei) and correlated with survival using multivariate Cox regression models. p53 was completely absent in 30.3%, focally expressed in 12.0%, and overexpressed in 57.7% of HGSCs, which was an inverse pattern compared to clear cell and endometrioid types of ovarian carcinomas, where 76% and 69% of cases showed focal expression, respectively (p < 0.001, chi square test). Pelvic HGSCs show either complete absence of p53 expression or p53 overexpression in 88% of cases; thus, aberrant p53 expression is a ubiquitous feature of HGSCs. HGSCs with p53 overexpression were associated with a reduced risk of recurrence compared to cases with complete absence of p53 in the British Columbia cohort with residual tumour (HR = 0.71, 95% CI 0.51–0.99) and for a combination of all three cohorts (HR = 0.70, 95% CI 0.55–0.89) in multivariate analysis including age, stage, residual tumour, and stratification by cohort. The association of complete absence of p53 expression with unfavourable outcome suggests functional differences of TP53 mutations underlying overexpression, compared to those underlying complete absence of expression. Copyright


The Journal of Pathology | 2016

Dual loss of the SWI/SNF complex ATPases SMARCA4/BRG1 and SMARCA2/BRM is highly sensitive and specific for small cell carcinoma of the ovary, hypercalcaemic type.

Anthony N. Karnezis; Yemin Wang; Pilar Ramos; William Hendricks; Esther Oliva; Emanuela D'Angelo; Jaime Prat; Marisa R. Nucci; Torsten O. Nielsen; Christine Chow; Samuel Leung; Friedrich Kommoss; Stefan Kommoss; Annacarolina da Silva; Brigitte M. Ronnett; Joseph T. Rabban; David Bowtell; Bernard E. Weissman; Jeffrey M. Trent; C. Blake Gilks; David Huntsman

Small cell carcinoma of the ovary, hypercalcaemic type (SCCOHT) is a lethal and sometimes familial ovarian tumour of young women and children. We and others recently discovered that over 90% of SCCOHTs harbour inactivating mutations in the chromatin remodelling gene SMARCA4 with concomitant loss of its encoded protein SMARCA4 (BRG1), one of two mutually exclusive ATPases of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex. To determine the specificity of SMARCA4 loss for SCCOHT, we examined the expression of SMARCA4 by immunohistochemistry in more than 3000 primary gynaecological tumours. Among ovarian tumours, it was only absent in clear cell carcinoma (15 of 360, 4%). In the uterus, it was absent in endometrial stromal sarcomas (4 of 52, 8%) and high‐grade endometrioid carcinomas (2 of 338, 1%). Recent studies have shown that SMARCA2 (BRM), the other mutually exclusive ATPase of the SWI/SNF complex, is necessary for survival of tumour cells lacking SMARCA4. Therefore, we examined SMARCA2 expression and discovered that all SMARCA4‐negative SCCOHTs also lacked SMARCA2 protein by IHC, including the SCCOHT cell lines BIN67 and SCCOHT1. Among ovarian tumours, the SMARCA4/SMARCA2 dual loss phenotype appears completely specific for SCCOHT. SMARCA2 loss was not due to mutation but rather from an absence of mRNA expression, which was restored by treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A. Re‐expression of SMARCA4 or SMARCA2 inhibited the growth of BIN67 and SCCOHT1 cell lines. Our results indicate that SMARCA4 loss, either alone or with SMARCA2, is highly sensitive and specific for SCCOHT and that restoration of either SWI/SNF ATPase can inhibit the growth of SCCOHT cell lines.


British Journal of Cancer | 2007

Independent prognostic significance of cell cycle regulator proteins p16INK4a and pRb in advanced-stage ovarian carcinoma including optimally debulked patients: a translational research subprotocol of a randomised study of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Gynaekologische Onkologie Ovarian Cancer Study Group

Stefan Kommoss; A du Bois; R Ridder; M J Trunk; Dietmar Schmidt; J. Pfisterer; Friedrich Kommoss

The purpose of the study is to test the hypothesis that expression of cell cycle regulatory proteins p16INK4a and pRb is significantly associated with prognosis in ovarian carcinomas. We performed immunohistochemical analysis of p16INK4a and pRb expression and correlated with survival in a series of 300 patients with FIGO stage IIb-IV ovarian carcinoma which were enrolled in a randomized prospective trial evaluating two different platinum and paxlitaxel chemotherapy combinations after radical surgery. p16INK4a negative tumours (17/300; 6%) had a significantly worse prognosis (univariate analysis, P<0.001; multivariate analysis: odds ratio 2.41, P=0.009). Among p16INK4a-positive tumours (283 out of 300; 94%), survival was better for patients with intermediate expression as compared to low or high expression levels (P=0.001). High expression levels of pRb were associated with an incremental deterioration of prognosis (univariate analysis, P=0.004; multivariate analysis: odds ratio 2.98, P=0.002). This observation held also true in the subgroup of optimally debulked patients (n=82), in whom the most important established prognostic factor, postoperative residual tumour cannot be applied. In conclusion p16INK4a and pRb are independent prognostic factors in advanced-stage ovarian carcinomas after radical surgery and postoperative chemotherapy. High pRb expression is a significant prognosticator in optimally debulked patients and may hold potential for subgroup stratification in postoperative treatment.


Modern Pathology | 2013

FOXL2 molecular testing in ovarian neoplasms: diagnostic approach and procedural guidelines

Stefan Kommoss; Michael S. Anglesio; Robertson Mackenzie; Winnie Yang; Janine Senz; Julie Ho; Lynda Bell; Sylvia Lee; Julie Lorette; David Huntsman; C. Blake Gilks

A single, recurrent somatic point mutation (402CG) in FOXL2 has been described in almost all adult-type granulosa cell tumors but not other ovarian neoplasms. Histopathological features of adult-type granulosa cell tumors can be mimicked by a variety of other tumors, making diagnosis of adult-type granulosa cell tumor challenging. It has been suggested that molecular testing for FOXL2 mutation might be a useful tool in the diagnosis of adult-type granulosa cell tumors. The aim of this study was to demonstrate how testing for the FOXL2 mutation can be used in a gynecological pathology consultation service and to establish clear procedural guidelines for FOXL2 testing. Immunohistochemistry for FOXL2 was done using an anti-FOXL2 polyclonal antiserum. If immunohistochemistry was positive, FOXL2 mutation status was subsequently analyzed using a TaqMan assay. A dilution experiment was done to assess the sensitivity and minimum tumor cellularity requirements for our TaqMan assay. Twenty problematic cases were assessed, where the differential diagnosis after the initial investigations included adult-type granulosa cell tumors. Differential diagnoses included: thecoma, Sertoli–Leydig cell tumor, juvenile granulosa cell tumor, endometrial stromal sarcoma and others. In all cases, FOXL2 immunohistochemistry was positive and in six samples the FOXL2 mutation was detected, thus confirming a diagnosis of adult-type granulosa cell tumor. The TaqMan assay was able to reliably detect the FOXL2 mutation with input DNA in the range of 2.5–20 ng, and with a minimum of 25% tumor cell nuclei. The analysis of the FOXL2 mutational status in clinical samples is a useful diagnostic tool in situations where the differential diagnosis is between adult-type granulosa cell tumor and other ovarian tumors. The TaqMan assay requires a minimum of 2.5 ng DNA, with optimal assay performance for 5 to 10 ng DNA input. Laser capture or needle-macrodissection should be undertaken to enrich samples with tumor cell content below 25%.


BMC Cancer | 2015

Targeted deep sequencing of mucinous ovarian tumors reveals multiple overlapping RAS-pathway activating mutations in borderline and cancerous neoplasms

Robertson Mackenzie; Stefan Kommoss; Boris Winterhoff; Benjamin R. Kipp; Joaquin J. Garcia; Jesse S. Voss; Kevin C. Halling; Anthony N. Karnezis; Janine Senz; Winnie Yang; Elena Sophie Prigge; Miriam Reuschenbach; Magnus von Knebel Doeberitz; Blake Gilks; David Huntsman; Jamie N. Bakkum-Gamez; Jessica N. McAlpine; Michael S. Anglesio

BackgroundMucinous ovarian tumors represent a distinct histotype of epithelial ovarian cancer. The rarest (2-4 % of ovarian carcinomas) of the five major histotypes, their genomic landscape remains poorly described. We undertook hotspot sequencing of 50 genes commonly mutated in human cancer across 69 mucinous ovarian tumors. Our goals were to establish the overall frequency of cancer-hotspot mutations across a large cohort, especially those tumors previously thought to be “RAS-pathway alteration negative”, using highly-sensitive next-generation sequencing as well as further explore a small number of cases with apparent heterogeneity in RAS-pathway activating alterations.MethodsUsing the Ion Torrent PGM platform, we performed next generation sequencing analysis using the v2 Cancer Hotspot Panel. Regions of disparate ERBB2-amplification status were sequenced independently for two mucinous carcinoma (MC) cases, previously established as showing ERBB2 amplification/overexpression heterogeneity, to assess the hypothesis of subclonal populations containing either KRAS mutation or ERBB2 amplification independently or simultaneously.ResultsWe detected mutations in KRAS, TP53, CDKN2A, PIK3CA, PTEN, BRAF, FGFR2, STK11, CTNNB1, SRC, SMAD4, GNA11 and ERBB2. KRAS mutations remain the most frequently observed alteration among MC (64.9 %) and mucinous borderline tumors (MBOT) (92.3 %). TP53 mutation occurred more frequently in carcinomas than borderline tumors (56.8 % and 11.5 %, respectively), and combined IHC and mutation data suggest alterations occur in approximately 68 % of MC and as many as 20 % of MBOT. Proven and potential RAS-pathway activating changes were observed in all but one MC. Concurrent ERBB2 amplification and KRAS mutation were observed in a substantial number of cases (7/63 total), as was co-occurrence of KRAS and BRAF mutations (one case). Microdissection of ERBB2-amplified regions of tumors harboring KRAS mutation suggests these alterations are occurring in the same cell populations, while consistency of KRAS allelic frequency in both ERBB2 amplified and non-amplified regions suggests this mutation occurred in advance of the amplification event.ConclusionsOverall, the prevalence of RAS-alteration and striking co-occurrence of pathway “double-hits” supports a critical role for tumor progression in this ovarian malignancy. Given the spectrum of RAS-activating mutations, it is clear that targeting this pathway may be a viable therapeutic option for patients with recurrent or advanced stage mucinous ovarian carcinoma, however caution should be exercised in selecting one or more personalized therapeutics given the frequency of non-redundant RAS-activating alterations.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2015

Synchronous Endometrial and Ovarian Carcinomas: Evidence of Clonality

Michael S. Anglesio; Yi Kan Wang; Madlen Maassen; Hugo M. Horlings; Ali Bashashati; Janine Senz; Robertson Mackenzie; Diljot Grewal; Hector Li-Chang; Anthony N. Karnezis; Brandon S. Sheffield; Melissa K. McConechy; Friedrich Kommoss; Florin Andrei Taran; Annette Staebler; Sohrab P. Shah; Diethelm Wallwiener; Sara Y. Brucker; C. Blake Gilks; Stefan Kommoss; David Huntsman

Many women with ovarian endometrioid carcinoma present with concurrent endometrial carcinoma. Organ-confined and low-grade synchronous endometrial and ovarian tumors (SEOs) clinically behave as independent primary tumors rather than a single advanced-stage carcinoma. We used 18 SEOs to investigate the ancestral relationship between the endometrial and ovarian components. Based on both targeted and exome sequencing, 17 of 18 patient cases of simultaneous cancer of the endometrium and ovary from our series showed evidence of a clonal relationship, ie, primary tumor and metastasis. Eleven patient cases fulfilled clinicopathological criteria that would lead to classification as independent endometrial and ovarian primary carcinomas, including being of FIGO stage T1a/1A, with organ-restricted growth and without surface involvement; 10 of 11 of these cases showed evidence of clonality. Our observations suggest that the disseminating cells amongst SEOs are restricted to physically accessible and microenvironment-compatible sites yet remain indolent, without the capacity for further dissemination.


Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy | 2010

Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation polymerases: mechanism and new target of anticancer therapy

Florian Heitz; Philipp Harter; N Ewald-Riegler; Michael Papsdorf; Stefan Kommoss; Andreas du Bois

Poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP) is a ubiquitously present nuclear enzyme that is not only involved in many important cellular pathways but also contributes to chromosomal structure and genomic stability. The development of highly selective and potent PARP inhibitors has become of increasing clinical interest because of their promising efficacy in patients with breast or ovarian cancer. Furthermore, recent Phase I and hase II trials have demonstrated that PARP inhibitors have low toxicity rates. In particular patients with either deficiency or dysfunction of BRCA, which is involved in DNA double strand break repair, appear to benefit from PARP inhibition. This article summarizes the present knowledge regarding the physiological function of PARP and ([poly]ADP-ribose) PAR, the functional product of PARP, the development of PARP inhibitors, the recent clinical data of PARP inhibitors in cancer treatment and the selection of patients who may benefit from PARP inhibition.


British Journal of Cancer | 2016

Ovarian carcinoma diagnosis: the clinical impact of 15 years of change.

Stefan Kommoss; C. Blake Gilks; Andreas du Bois; Friedrich Kommoss

Background:Until recently ovarian carcinoma was considered to be a single disease, and treatment decisions were based solely on grade and pre- and postoperative tumour burden. New insights into molecular features, treatment response, and patient demographics led the scientific community to conclude that ovarian carcinoma histotypes are different disease entities.Methods:In 2002, the pathology specimens from patients in a clinical trial were reviewed by an experienced gynaecopathologist (pathologist A) for translational research purposes. All cases were typed according to what were then current criteria. The identical cohort was now reassessed by the same expert pathologist and independently reviewed by another gynaecopathologist (pathologist B) applying WHO 2014 diagnostic criteria. Survival analyses were done based on the original as well as the new diagnoses, and historical biomarker study results were recalculated.Results:Upon re-review, pathologist A rendered the same histotype diagnosis in only 54% of cases. In contrast, pathologists A and B independently rendered the same diagnosis in 98% of cases. Histotype was of prognostic significance when 2014 diagnoses were used, but was not prognostic using the original (2002) histotype diagnoses.Conclusions:Our study demonstrates a marked shift in ovarian carcinoma histotype diagnosis over the past 15 years. The new criteria are associated with a very high degree of interobserver reproducibility, allowing for treatment decisions based on histotype. Finally, biomarkers of putative prognostic significance were revealed to be primarily histotype-specific markers, confirming the critical importance of obtaining up-to-date diagnoses rather than accepting archival histotype data in clinical research.

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David Huntsman

University of British Columbia

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Andreas du Bois

University of Duisburg-Essen

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C. Blake Gilks

University of British Columbia

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Michael S. Anglesio

University of British Columbia

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