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SMART-MS

Intrathecal Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Progressive Multiple Sclerosis: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial (SMART-MS)

Year of Publication: 2026

Authors: Kvistad CE, Kråkenes T, Holmøy T, ..., Bø L

Journal: Neurology

Citation: Neurology 2026;106:e214915. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000214915

Link: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000214915


Clinical Question

Does a single intrathecal injection of autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells produce neuroregenerative effects in progressive multiple sclerosis?

Bottom Line

A single intrathecal injection of autologous MSCs did NOT produce a measurable neuroregenerative effect in progressive MS, and was associated with concerning local inflammatory adverse events including arachnoiditis. Intrathecal MSC administration in progressive MS should be approached with caution in future studies.

Major Points

  • Negative primary outcome: no significant between-group difference in change of combined evoked potential latency at 6 months (β = −0.31, 95% CI −1.84 to 1.22, p = 0.668)
  • Reduced cerebral atrophy on MRI at 6 months in MSC group (β = 9.37, 95% CI 0.29 to 18.45, p = 0.044), not sustained at 12 months
  • Lower serum GFAP at 6 months (β = −16.3 pg/mL, 95% CI −33.0 to 0.3, p = 0.054), not sustained at 12 months
  • Exploratory CSF proteomics showed reductions in multiple inflammation-related proteins at 6 months
  • Notable safety signal: one SAE probably related to MSC, fever (n=9), low back pain (n=10), spinal MRI abnormalities with fluid loculations and nerve root clumping (n=7), one case of chronic coccygeal pain attributed to arachnoiditis
  • Class III evidence that intrathecal autologous MSCs do NOT provide neuroregenerative effects in progressive MS

Design

Study Type: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover phase I/II trial

Randomization: 1

Blinding: Double-blind; study drug prepared in separate room and injected behind patient; all patients underwent bone marrow aspiration twice to maintain blinding

Allocation: Concealed; blocks of 4 using computer-generated sequence prepared by an independent statistician

Enrollment Period: First patient enrolled August 9, 2021

Follow-up Duration: 18 months (end-of-study safety visit); efficacy outcomes at 6 and 12 months

Centers: 4

Countries: Norway

Sample Size: 18

Analyzed: 18

Analysis: Baseline-adjusted regression (ANCOVA) models; missing evoked potential data imputed using longest conduction time within same modality

Power Calculation: Sample size of 18 patients determined based on feasibility and precedent from similar early-phase proof-of-concept trials

Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04749667 (registered February 8, 2021)


Inclusion Criteria

  • Primary or secondary progressive MS per revised McDonald criteria
  • Age 18-55 years
  • Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score of 4-7
  • Disease duration of 2-18 years
  • No relapses for at least 24 months before enrollment
  • No new or enlarging MRI lesions for at least 24 months before enrollment
  • Untreated with DMTs during the study

Exclusion Criteria

  • Active or chronic infection
  • History of malignancy
  • Polyneuropathy
  • Severe comorbid illness
  • Other conditions that could affect cognition or compliance

Arms

FieldArm A: MSC then PlaceboControl
N00
InterventionAutologous intrathecal MSCs 1 × 10^6 cells/kg (max 100 × 10^6) at baseline, then 0.9% saline placebo at 6 months (crossover)0.9% saline placebo at baseline, then autologous intrathecal MSCs 1 × 10^6 cells/kg at 6 months (crossover)
Duration18 months total follow-up18 months total follow-up

Outcomes

OutcomeTypeControlInterventionHR / OR / RRP-value
Change in latency of combined evoked potentials (CEPs) — sum of z-transformed latencies for visual (VEP), motor (MEP), and somatosensory (SEP) evoked potentials bilaterallyPrimaryPlacebo groupMSC group0.668
Secondary0.044
Secondary0.054
Secondary
Secondary
Safety
Safety
Safety
Safety
Safety
Fever (post-MSC)Adverse
Low back pain (post-MSC)Adverse
Spinal MRI abnormalities (fluid loculations, nerve root clumping)Adverse
Arachnoiditis with chronic coccygeal painAdverse
Serious AE probably MSC-relatedAdverse

Criticisms

  • Small sample size (n=18) limits interpretation and statistical power, as acknowledged by authors
  • Crossover design may complicate interpretation of 12-month outcomes given that placebo arm received MSCs at 6 months
  • Single-country (Norway) enrollment may limit generalizability
  • Notable safety signals (arachnoiditis, fluid loculations, nerve root clumping in 7/18) raise concerns about intrathecal MSC safety profile
  • Class III level of evidence

Funding

Article Processing Charge funded by Klinbeforsk

Based on: SMART-MS (Neurology, 2026)

Authors: Kvistad CE, Kråkenes T, Holmøy T, ..., Bø L

Citation: Neurology 2026;106:e214915. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000214915

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