Researchers want to understand whether the drug rituximab, which is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and some types of cancer, is able to slow down or stop the progression of secondary-progressive MS. In people with earlier, active disease, this drug can stop inflammation in the brain. However, intravenous rituximab did not help people with primary-progressive MS, possibly because the drug could not get through the intact blood-brain barrier. In this new trial, to ensure that the rituximab will reach the brain and spinal cord in people with secondary-progressive MS, participants will receive it intravenously and by injection through a lumbar puncture into the cerebrospinal fluid (“spinal tap”).
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