Mar 18
Cancer

New Study Explores Cancer Therapy for MS

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Adobe Stock/Andrey Popov
New Study Explores Cancer Therapy for MS

A cutting-edge cancer therapy is now being explored as a potential treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS), offering new hope for patients living with the chronic neurological disease.

Researchers are studying whether CAR-T therapy — a treatment already used in certain cancers — could help slow or even halt the progression of MS.


How CAR-T Therapy Works

CAR-T therapy involves taking a patient’s own immune cells, modifying them in a lab, and reintroducing them into the body to target specific harmful cells.

Originally designed to fight cancers like leukemia and lymphoma, the therapy trains T cells to attack problematic B cells — a type of immune cell also linked to MS.

In MS, these B cells mistakenly attack myelin, the protective layer around nerve fibers, disrupting communication in the brain and nervous system.


Why It Could Be a Game-Changer

One of the biggest challenges in treating MS is reaching harmful immune cells located in the brain and central nervous system.

Experts believe CAR-T therapy may succeed where existing treatments fall short by targeting these hidden cells more effectively.

Early trials, including research at the Cleveland Clinic, are exploring whether this approach can reduce inflammation and slow disease progression.


Early Trials Show Promise — But Questions Remain

So far, studies are small and in early stages. Researchers emphasize that it’s too soon to know whether the therapy will be widely effective or safe for long-term use in MS patients.

Clinical trials are also underway at major institutions across the U.S., including Stanford University, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Columbia University.

Still, the fact that CAR-T therapy has already been used successfully in cancer treatment gives researchers a strong starting point.


A New Frontier in Autoimmune Treatment

For patients like Grace Miller, who have lived with MS for years and faced declining mobility and vision challenges, experimental treatments like CAR-T represent a potential turning point.

While it’s not yet a cure, the research signals a broader shift — one where breakthroughs in one area of medicine may unlock new possibilities in another.


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