New study finds common blood pressure drug boosts cancer treatment

Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH, FACP
Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH, FACP

We are encouraged by what we are seeing so far. We have multiple trials in development to determine whether this approach can help more patients benefit from more effective cancer treatments.

Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH, FACP

Dartmouth Cancer Center (DCC) researchers have discovered that an existing, widely used blood pressure medication may help improve the effectiveness of certain cancer treatments—potentially expanding their use to many more patients and reducing toxicities.

In a new study led by DCC clinician-scientist Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH, FACP, investigators found that the FDA-approved blood pressure drug telmisartan can significantly enhance the cancer-killing activity of the targeted cancer therapy olaparib.

“This study shows that a common, safe, convenient, tolerable, and inexpensive once-daily pill may significantly improve how well an important class of cancer therapies works,” said Curiel. 

Exploiting cancer’s weakness

PARP inhibitor drugs, such as olaparib, work by exploiting weaknesses in how some cancer cells repair damaged DNA. PARP inhibitors are particularly effective in tumors with certain gene mutations. However, many tumors lack these mutations, limiting the number of patients who can benefit from these drugs. Cancers can also eventually develop resistance to PARP inhibitors.

In early studies, Curiel’s team discovered that when combined with olaparib, telmisartan can make tumors more vulnerable to PARP inhibitors, even when the tumors lack the gene mutations that usually make this type of drug effective.

The combination also stimulated an immune response within the tumor. Specifically, the combination of the two drugs fueled the production of a type of molecule that helps the immune system recognize and attack cancer. 

“This immune activation appears to be a key reason the combination works so well,” Curiel said.

Unique among blood pressure drugs

Telmisartan belongs to a class of medications called “angiotensin II receptor blockers” (ARBs), commonly prescribed to treat hypertension, or high blood pressure. But the DCC study found that the cancer-treatment-enhancing effects were unique to telmisartan among all of the ARBs tested.

Telmisartan also reduced levels of a protein inside tumor cells that cancers use to evade immune attack—further increasing its therapeutic potential.

“This study was about PARP inhibitors,” Curiel said. “But we also have a lot of evidence that telmisartan makes certain other chemotherapies and immunotherapies more effective through related mechanisms. Its potential could therefore extend to many other types of cancers and treatments.”

Bench to bedside: clinical trials

Telmisartan’s widespread use and high tolerability, even in people without high blood pressure, make it ideal for clinical use. Curiel’s team is already using the combination strategy in patients through two ongoing clinical trials at DCC.

One trial is for men with metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer. The first patient enrolled in the study experienced what Curiel described as an exceptional response to treatment. The second trial is in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, which just enrolled its first patient.

“We are encouraged by what we are seeing so far,” Curiel said. “We have multiple trials in development to determine whether this approach can help more patients benefit from more effective cancer treatments.”

About Dartmouth Cancer Center

Since 1972, Dartmouth Cancer Center (DCC) has combined groundbreaking and advanced cancer research at Dartmouth and the Geisel School of Medicine with award-winning, personalized, compassionate, patient-centered cancer care and clinical trials. At its flagship location at Dartmouth Health’s Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, with 14 locations across New Hampshire and Vermont, DCC is one of fewer than 60 National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers nationally. Each year, DCC manages 74,000 appointments, treats more than 4,500 newly diagnosed patients, and currently offers more than 240 active clinical trials. DCC remains committed to excellence, outreach and education. DCC strives to create new knowledge and impact, accelerate integrated and collaborative research to prevent and cure cancer, enhance survivorship and promote cancer-related health equity. Learn more at cancer.dartmouth.edu.

About Dartmouth Health

Dartmouth Health, New Hampshire’s only academic health system and largest private employer, serves patients across New England. Dartmouth Health provides access to more than 2,300 providers in nearly every area of medicine, delivering care at its flagship hospital, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center (DHMC) in Lebanon, NH. Its network of hospitals, outpatient centers, clinics and home care facilities, spans a broad geographical area. Year after year, DHMC is named the #1 hospital in New Hampshire by U.S. News & World Report, and is consistently recognized for high performance in numerous clinical specialties and procedures. Dartmouth Health includes Dartmouth Cancer Center, northern New England’s only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers and one of less than than 60 total nationally; Dartmouth Health Children’s, which includes the state’s only children’s hospital (Children’s Hospital at DHMC/CHaD) and more than 20 locations around the region; eight member hospitals in Lebanon, Keene, Claremont, Hampstead, and New London, NH, and Windsor and Bennington, VT; Dartmouth Health Home Care; Dartmouth Health Connected Care Center for Telehealth, serving patients as far away as Texas; and more than 30 primary and multi-specialty clinics across New Hampshire and Vermont. Through its partnership with Dartmouth College, Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine and the White River Junction VA Medical Center, Dartmouth Health trains nearly 400 medical residents and fellows annually and performs cutting-edge research and clinical trials with international impact. Dartmouth Health and its more than 16,000 employees are committed to serving the healthcare needs of everyone in the communities it serves and to providing every patient with exceptional, state-of-the-art, personalized care. Learn more at dartmouth-health.org.