Investigator

Robert L. Hollis

Group Leader, CRUK Career Development Fellow · University of Edinburgh, Cancer Research UK Scotland Centre, Institute of Genetics and Cancer

RLHRobert L. Hollis
Papers(12)
Molecular Profiling a…Oxford Classic–Define…The survival benefit …Compartment-specific …Molecular characteris…Patterns of clinicopa…Structural Variants a…Ovarian carcinosarcom…Multiomic Characteriz…Divergent trajectorie…Antibody drug conjuga…Somatic BRCA1/2 mutat…
Collaborators(10)
C. Simon HerringtonCharlie GourleyMichael ChurchmanAilith EwingPatricia RoxburghAlison MeynertColin A. SempleRosalind GlasspoolAthena MatakidouAndrew V. Biankin
Institutions(4)
University Of Edinbur…University of Edinbur…University of GlasgowEiger Biopharmaceutic…

Papers

Molecular Profiling and Tumor Biomarker Analysis of GOG281/LOGS: A Positive Late-Phase Trial of Trametinib for Recurrent/Persistent Low-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

Abstract Purpose: Low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (LGSOC) is a distinct form of ovarian cancer characterized by younger patient age and relative chemoresistance. The GOG281/LOGS trial (NCT02101788) investigated the efficacy of the MEK inhibitor trametinib compared with physician’s choice standard-of-care (SOC) in patients with LGSOC with persistent/recurrent disease. The study demonstrated significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) in the trametinib-treated arm. Experimental Design: Two hundred and sixty patients with recurrent/persistent LGSOC were enrolled and randomly assigned in GOG281. We performed molecular analysis of 170 patients with available tumor specimens, comprising whole-exome sequencing and phospho-ERK (pERK) IHC, to identify biomarkers of clinical benefit from trametinib. The demographics of the translational cohort (n = 170) were comparable with those of the total trial cohort. Results: High tumor pERK expression (greater than the median histoscore of 140) was associated with significantly prolonged PFS with trametinib treatment versus SOC (median 20.1 vs. 5.6 months, log-rank P < 0.0001; test for interaction P = 0.023). Tumors harboring canonical RAS–RAF–MAPK mutations (KRAS/BRAF/NRAS: 44/134, 32.8% of cases) had a higher response rate to trametinib (50.0% vs. 8.3%; Barnard’s P = 0.0004; test for interaction P = 0.054), but KRAS/BRAF/NRAS status was not predictive of prolonged PFS (test for interaction P = 0.719). KRAS amplification (n = 5 without KRAS/NRAS/BRAF mutation) and mutation of MAPK-associated genes (n = 25 without KRAS/NRAS/BRAF mutation or KRAS copy number gain) expanded the number of cases with identifiable MAPK defects to 55.2%, but consideration of these events did not improve the discrimination of trametinib responders. Chr1p loss (49% of cases) was associated with lower pERK expression (P = 0.021). Conclusions: This exploratory analysis suggests that pERK expression and mutation of KRAS/BRAF/NRAS are candidate biomarkers of improved PFS and response to trametinib, respectively.

Oxford Classic–Defined EMT Risk Stratification of High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer for Guiding Treatment Decisions

Abstract Purpose: The association between epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) and poor prognosis is known. However, molecularly defining a subset of tumors that reproducibly associates with poor prognosis has been an elusive goal in this disease. A molecular signature that can robustly identify patients with poor prognosis and guide treatment decisions, including surgical strategy and targeted therapies, can improve survival rates. Experimental Design: We carried out RNA sequencing of 139 tumor samples (Brescia cohort); an external validation on 362 and 126 patients from the Scottish and Garsed cohorts, respectively; and a meta-analysis of 1,023 tumors to develop clinically useful risk groups. Identification of therapeutic targets was carried out by transcriptomic analyses of fluorescence-activated cell sorted (FACS) tumor epithelial cells and multiplex immunofluorescence assessment of tissue sections. Results: In this study, we have validated the prognostic strength of the Oxford Classic–defined EMT in three independent patient cohorts: Brescia [HR = 3.6; 95% confidence interval (CI) of 1.59–7.97; P = 1.99e−03], Scottish (HR = 1.71; 95% CI of 1.08–2.70; P = 2.23e−02), and Garsed (Kruskal–Wallis P = 0.00071). OxC-based risk stratification of HGSOC could robustly identify poor-risk patients with a 5-year median survival for OxC high-risk and OxC low-risk groups of 13% and 50%, respectively (95% CI of 7.1%–23.5% vs. 36.1%–69.3%) in the Brescia cohort. Further analysis of the risk groups suggests that an alternative surgical strategy and a combination therapy involving EMT targeting drugs and immunomodulators could elicit improved clinical response in poor-risk patients. Conclusions: This study provides a clinically useful risk stratification strategy for HGSOC, as well as targeted treatment options for high-risk patients. See related commentary by Venegas et al., p. 10

The survival benefit associated with complete macroscopic resection in epithelial ovarian cancer is histotype specific

Abstract Background Complete macroscopic resection is a key factor associated with prolonged survival in ovarian cancer. However, most evidence derives from high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma, and the benefit of complete macroscopic resection in other histotypes is poorly characterized. We sought to determine which histotypes derive the greatest benefit from complete macroscopic resection to better inform future decisions on radical cytoreductive efforts. Methods We performed multivariable analysis of disease-specific survival across 2 independent patient cohorts to determine the magnitude of benefit associated with complete macroscopic resection within each histotype. Results Across both cohorts (Scottish: n = 1622; Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results [SEER]: n = 18 947), complete macroscopic resection was associated with prolonged disease-specific survival; this was more marked in the Scottish cohort (multivariable hazard ratio [HR] = 0.44, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.37 to 0.52 vs HR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.57 to 0.62 in SEER). In both cohorts, clear cell ovarian carcinoma was among the histotypes to benefit most from complete macroscopic resection (multivariable HR = 0.23 and HR = 0.50 in Scottish and SEER cohorts, respectively); high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma patients demonstrated highly statistically significant and clinically meaningful survival benefit, but this was of lower magnitude than in clear cell ovarian carcinoma and endometrioid ovarian carcinoma across both cohorts. The benefit derived in low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma is also high (multivariable HR = 0.27 in Scottish cohort). Complete macroscopic resection was associated with prolonged survival in mucinous ovarian carcinoma patients in the SEER cohort (multivariable HR = 0.65), but the association failed to reach statistical significance in the Scottish cohort. Conclusions The overall ovarian cancer patient population demonstrates clinically significant survival benefit associated with complete macroscopic resection; however, the magnitude of benefit differs between histotypes.

Compartment-specific multiomic profiling identifies SRC and GNAS as candidate drivers of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in ovarian carcinosarcoma

Abstract Background Ovarian carcinosarcoma (OCS) is an exceptionally aggressive and understudied ovarian cancer type harbouring distinct carcinomatous and sarcomatous compartments. Here, we seek to identify shared and compartment-specific events that may represent potential therapeutic targets and candidate drivers of sarcomatous compartment formation through epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Methods We performed multiomic profiling (exome sequencing, RNA-sequencing, microRNA profiling) of paired carcinomatous and sarcomatous components in 12 OCS cases. Results While paired sarcomatous and carcinomatous compartments demonstrate substantial genomic similarities, multiple loci are recurrently copy number-altered between components; regions containing GNAS and SRC are recurrently gained within the sarcomatous compartment. CCNE1 gain is a common event in OCS, occurring more frequently than in high grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC). Transcriptomic analysis suggests increased MAPK activity and subtype switching toward poor prognosis HGSOC-derived transcriptomic subtypes within the sarcomatous component. The two compartments show global differences in microRNA profiles, with differentially expressed microRNAs targeting EMT-related genes (SIRT1, ZEB2) and regulators of pro-tumourigenic pathways (TGFβ, NOTCH); chrX is a highly enriched target of these microRNAs and is also frequently deleted across samples. The sarcomatous component harbours significantly fewer CD8-positive cells, suggesting poorer immune engagement. Conclusion CCNE1 gain and chrX loss are frequent in OCS. SRC gain, increased GNAS expression and microRNA dysregulation represent potential mechanisms driving sarcomatous compartment formation.

Patterns of clinicopathological features and outcome in epithelial ovarian cancer patients: 35 years of prospectively collected data

ObjectiveInvestigate the clinical landscape of ovarian carcinoma (OC) over time.DesignRegister‐based prospectively collected data.SettingSouth East Scotland.SampleA total of 2805 OC patients diagnosed in 1981–2015.MethodsSurvival times were visualised using the Kaplan–Meier method; median survival, 5‐year survival probabilities and associated restricted mean survival time analyses were used to quantify survival differences.Main outcome measuresDisease‐specific survival.ResultsA significant increase in disease‐specific survival (DSS) from 1981–1985 to 2011–2015 was observed (median 1.73 versus 4.23 years, P < 0.0001). Corresponding increase in progression‐free survival (PFS) was not statistically significant (median 1.22 versus 1.58 years, P = 0.2568). An increase in the proportion of cases with low residual disease volume (RD) (<2 cm RD) following debulking was observed (54.0% versus 87.7%, P < 0.0001). The proportion of high grade serous (HGS) cases increased (P < 0.0001), whereas endometrioid and mucinous cases decreased (P = 0.0005 and P = 0.0002). Increases in stage IV HGS OC incidence (P = 0.0009) and stage IV HGS OC DSS (P = 0.0122) were observed. Increasing median age at diagnosis correlated with increasing Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status (ECOG PS) over time (r = 0.86).ConclusionsOC DSS has improved over the last 35 years. PFS has not significantly increased, highlighting that improvement in outcome has been limited to extending post‐relapse survival. Distribution of stage at diagnosis, histological subtype and RD following debulking has changed over time, reflecting evolution in tumour classification, staging and optimal debulking definitions (from low RD to minimal or zero RD). Histology, stage, RD and ECOG PS remain reliable outcome predictors. Increasing median age at diagnosis and ECOG PS indicates demographic shifts in the clinical population.Tweetable abstractSignificant improvement in ovarian carcinoma survival has been seen over time. Most of this improvement is due to an extension of survival following disease relapse.

Structural Variants at the BRCA1/2 Loci are a Common Source of Homologous Repair Deficiency in High-grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

Abstract Purpose: The abundance and effects of structural variation at BRCA1/2 in tumors are not well understood. In particular, the impact of these events on homologous recombination repair deficiency (HRD) has yet to be demonstrated. Experimental Design: Exploiting a large collection of whole-genome sequencing data from high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (N = 205) together with matched RNA sequencing for the majority of tumors (N = 150), we have comprehensively characterized mutation and expression at BRCA1/2. Results: In addition to the known spectrum of short somatic mutations (SSM), we discovered that multi-megabase structural variants (SV) were a frequent, unappreciated source of BRCA1/2 disruption in these tumors, and we found a genome-wide enrichment for large deletions at the BRCA1/2 loci across the cohort. These SVs independently affected a substantial proportion of patients (16%) in addition to those affected by SSMs (24%), conferring HRD and impacting patient survival. We also detail compound deficiencies involving SSMs and SVs at both loci, demonstrating that the strongest risk of HRD emerges from combined SVs at both BRCA1 and BRCA2 in the absence of SSMs. Furthermore, these SVs are abundant and disruptive in other cancer types. Conclusions: These results extend our understanding of the mutational landscape underlying HRD, increase the number of patients predicted to benefit from therapies exploiting HRD, and suggest there is currently untapped potential in SV detection for patient stratification.

Ovarian carcinosarcoma is a distinct form of ovarian cancer with poorer survival compared to tubo-ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma

Abstract Background Ovarian carcinosarcoma (OCS) is an uncommon, biphasic and highly aggressive ovarian cancer type, which has received relatively little research attention. Methods We curated the largest pathologically confirmed OCS cohort to date, performing detailed histopathological characterisation, analysis of features associated with survival and comparison against high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC). Results Eighty-two OCS patients were identified; overall survival was poor (median 12.7 months). In all, 79% demonstrated epithelial components of high-grade serous (HGS) type, while 21% were endometrioid. Heterologous elements were common (chondrosarcoma in 32%, rhabdomyosarcoma in 21%, liposarcoma in 2%); chondrosarcoma was more frequent in OCS with endometrioid carcinomatous components. Earlier stage, complete resection and platinum-containing adjuvant chemotherapy were associated with prolonged survival; however, risk of relapse and mortality was high across all patient groups. Histological subclassification did not identify subgroups with distinct survival. Compared to HGSOC, OCS patients were older ( P  < 0.0001), more likely to be FIGO stage I ( P  = 0.025), demonstrated lower chemotherapy response rate ( P  = 0.001) and had significantly poorer survival ( P  < 0.0001). Conclusion OCS represents a distinct, highly lethal form of ovarian cancer for which new treatment strategies are urgently needed. Histological subclassification does not identify patient subgroups with distinct survival. Aggressive adjuvant chemotherapy should be considered for all cases, including those with early-stage disease.

Multiomic Characterization of High-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma Enables High-Resolution Patient Stratification

Abstract Purpose: High-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) is the most common ovarian cancer type; most patients experience disease recurrence that accumulates chemoresistance, leading to treatment failure. Genomic and transcriptomic features have been associated with differential outcome and treatment response. However, the relationship between events at the gene sequence, copy number, and gene-expression levels remains poorly defined. Experimental Design: We perform multiomic characterization of a large HGSOC cohort (n = 362) with detailed clinical annotation to interrogate the relationship between patient subgroups defined by specific molecular events. Results: BRCA2-mutant (BRCA2m) and EMSY-overexpressing cases demonstrated prolonged survival [multivariable hazard ratios (HR) 0.40 and 0.51] and significantly higher first- and second-line chemotherapy response rate. CCNE1-gained (CCNE1g) cases demonstrated underrepresentation of FIGO stage IV cases, with shorter survival but no significant difference in treatment response. We demonstrate marked overlap between the TCGA- and Tothill-derived subtypes. IMR/C2 cases displayed higher BRCA1/2m frequency (25.5%, 32.5%) and significantly greater immune cell infiltration, whereas PRO/C5 cases had the highest CCNE1g rate (23.9%, 22.2%) and were uniformly low in immune cell infiltration. The survival benefit for cases with aberrations in homologous recombination repair (HRR) genes was apparent across all transcriptomic subtypes (HR range, 0.48–0.68). There was significant co-occurrence of RB loss and HRR gene aberrations; RB loss was further associated with favorable survival within HRR-aberrant cases (multivariable HR, 0.50). Conclusions: These data paint a high-resolution picture of the molecular landscape in HGSOC, better defining patients who may benefit most from specific molecular therapeutics and highlighting those for whom novel treatment strategies are needed to improve outcomes.

Antibody drug conjugate targets are highly differentially expressed across the major types of ovarian cancer

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are emerging anti-cancer agents. The folate receptor alpha (FOLRα)-directed ADC mirvetuximab soravtansine recently demonstrated clinical activity in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, with other ADCs currently in development. The relative expression of FOLRα and other ADC targets is largely unknown across ovarian cancer histotypes. Expression levels of the ADC targets FOLRα, TROP2 and B7-H4 were assessed by immunohistochemistry in patient cohorts using tumour tissue microarrays of the major ovarian cancer histotypes: high grade serous (HGSOC, n = 331); endometrioid (EnOC, n = 101) and clear cell ovarian carcinoma (CCOC, n = 60). Degree of expression was quantified by membrane histoscore. We observed differences in ADC target expression patterns across ovarian cancer histotypes. FOLRα expression was highest in HGSOC, with few EnOC or CCOC demonstrating positivity (HGSOC: 70.9 % FOLRα histoscore ≥50 vs 21.1 % and 29.3 % in EnOC and CCOC). B7-H4 was expressed in HGSOC, EnOC and CCOC (99.7 %, 89.8 % and 80.7 % with histoscore ≥50). CCOC were mostly TROP2 negative (89.3 % with histoscore <50); a subset of HGSOC and EnOC expressed TROP2 (54.8 % and 57.7 % with histoscore ≥50, respectively). There was no significant association between ADC target expression and molecular subtypes of HGSOC (BRCA1/2-mutant, CCNE1-gained, other) or EnOC (TP53-mutant, CTNNB1-mutant, POLE-mutant, MMR deficient, no specific molecular profile). In CCOC, ARID1A/B mutation was associated with lower B7-H4 expression (P-adj=0.024). EnOC and CCOC are usually FOLRα negative, while HGSOC, EnOC and CCOC frequently express B7-H4. TROP2 positivity is limited to HGSOC and EnOC. Careful consideration of histotype and ADC target expression levels is warranted when designing and analysing clinical studies of ADCs.

Somatic BRCA1/2 mutations are associated with a similar survival advantage to their germline counterparts in tubo-ovarian high grade serous carcinoma

Half of high grade serous tubo-ovarian carcinomas (HGSOC) demonstrate homologous recombination repair (HRR) deficiency, most commonly through germline or somatic pathogenic variants in BRCA1/2 (gBRCA1/2 or sBRCA1/2). gBRCA1/2 is associated with favourable survival, greater response rate to platinum-based chemotherapy, and marked sensitivity to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. sBRCA1/2 has been assumed to confer a similar clinical phenotype; however, few studies have specifically investigated sBRCA1/2 versus gBRCA1/2 to demonstrate their equivalence. We investigated the association of gBRCA1/2, sBRCA1/2 and non-BRCA HRR gene mutations with HGSOC patient survival using two patient cohorts (cohort 1, n = 174 matched FFPE tumour and normal with panel-based sequencing; cohort 2, n = 279 matched fresh tumour and normal with whole genome sequencing). TCGA-OV samples (n = 316) were used for external validation. Patients with HRR-mutant tumours (BRCA1, BRCA2, non-BRCA HRR-mutant) demonstrated prolonged survival across both cohorts (cohort 1: multivariable hazard ratio [multiHR] 0.53 [0.32-0.87]; cohort 2: multiHR 0.36 [0.25-0.51]). gBRCA1/2 and sBRCA1/2 were associated with a similar survival benefit compared to the HRR-wildtype group in the combined cohort (cohort 1 +2) (gBRCA1/2: multiHR 0.50 [0.34-0.71]; sBRCA1/2: multiHR 0.41 [0.25-0.68]). These findings were recapitulated using the TCGA-OV dataset (gBRCA1/2: multiHR 0.56 [0.34-0.91]; sBRCA1/2: multiHR 0.48 [0.25-0.92]). Non-BRCA HRR mutations were associated with marked survival advantage (multiHR vs HRR-wildtype 0.22 [0.11-0.45]). The survival advantage in BRCA1-mutant cases (germline or somatic) was less marked (multiHR for non-BRCA HRR-mutant vs BRCA1-mutant 0.41 [0.19-0.90]). gBRCA1/2, sBRCA1/2 and non-BRCA HRR mutations were all associated with high HRDetect scores measuring HRR deficiency (median 1.00 versus 0.56 in HRR-wildtype, P < 0.01). gBRCA1/2 and sBRCA1/2 are equivalent in their association with prolonged survival. Non-BRCA HRR gene mutations may be associated with markedly favourable survival in HGSOC.

51Works
12Papers
73Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsNeoplasm GradingCarcinoma, Ovarian EpithelialBiomarkers, TumorNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalPrognosisCarcinoma, Endometrioid

Positions

2025–

Group Leader, CRUK Career Development Fellow

University of Edinburgh · Cancer Research UK Scotland Centre, Institute of Genetics and Cancer

2022–

Talent Fellow

University of Edinburgh · Institute of Genetics and Cancer

2018–

Research Fellow

University of Edinburgh · Cancer Research UK Edinburgh Centre

Education

2018

PhD, Investigating the impact of molecular stratification on ovarian cancer treatment and outcome

University of Edinburgh

2014

BSc (Hons) Biomedical Sciences, First Class

Newcastle University

Country

GB

Keywords
cancer researchovarian cancergynaecological cancershuman tumour profilingtumour subgrouping and biomarkersrisk and therapy stratification