Clinical Research

Clinical research is a branch of medical research that involves people who have volunteered to participate, and which aims to determine the safety and effectiveness of the most promising advances in patient care (e.g., medications, devices, tools, technologies, diagnostic tests, treatment regimens).

The two main kinds of clinical research include:

  1. Observational studies – aim to identify and analyze patterns in medical data or biologic samples provided by study participants
  2. Clinical trials (also known as interventional studies) – test the safety and effectiveness of medical interventions in living people

Within these kinds of research, there are many types of studies. These can include:

  1. Studies on human biospecimens e.g., research on biological materials stored in a tissue bank
  2. Healthy volunteer studies e.g., studies on how a new drug affects the body
  3. Surveys, interviews, focus groups e.g., studies on health behaviors, practices and opinions

Clinical Trials

A clinical trial is a type of research study that tests health interventions on people (for example, a new medication), providing extremely valuable learnings for medical advancement.

Clinical trials help connect individuals with new and emerging treatments while ensuring utmost safety and as little risk as possible to participants.

Clinical trials answer important questions, such as: “Does this new medication improve outcomes?”, “Are there side effects and how manageable are they?”, and “Does it help people feel better?” This helps healthcare providers to decide what will work best for different people in order to promote their health and well-being.

RELEVANT CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDIES CURRENTLY RECRUITING PARTICIPANTS

Ovarian Cancer Canada is committed to driving research forward, and therefore shares relevant research opportunities with those affected by ovarian cancer, where appropriate.

Not all studies listed below are funded by OCC, but: 1) are open to Canadian participants, 2) have obtained Research Ethics Board approval, and 3) have been deemed relevant to the ovarian cancer community by OCC staff.

Connect

with us

If you have questions or would like more information and support, please contact Alison Ross, Director, Knowledge Mobilization at aross@ovariancanada.org or at 1-877-413-7970 ext. 237.