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Deciding Whether to Participate in a Clinical Trial
Enrollment in clinical trials is always voluntary and is usually most opportune at the time of an individual's initial diagnosis, before the start of treatment.

Clinical trials -- also known as clinical studies or research protocols -- are conducted by doctors to test whether a new drug, a new prevention strategy, or a new screening test is safe and effective in people.

Approximately 1,500 cancer clinical trials are currently active in the United States. Memorial Sloan-Kettering investigators conduct as many as 400 of those studies, ranging from small, short-term studies to large trials with thousands of patients in many institutions.

In this section, you can find general information about clinical trials and a continually updated listing of key clinical trials at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center that are currently enrolling patients.

  • About Clinical Trials
    Clinical trials are conducted by doctors to test whether a new drug, a new prevention strategy, or a new screening test is safe and effective in people.
  • Find a Clinical Trial
    Descriptions of some of the newest clinical trials at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
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