CancerFax
Trial Navigation Hub

Find Cancer Clinical Trials Across Leading Hospitals and Research Centers

Explore clinical trials by cancer type, treatment, mutation, country, hospital, or city. CancerFax helps patients and families understand trial options with clarity, caution, and expert coordination.

Clinical trials may offer access to promising therapies when standard treatment options are limited, unavailable, or no longer effective. We help patients explore suitable trials across advanced cancer centers โ€” especially for complex, relapsed, refractory, and mutation-specific cancers.

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Trial information is for educational purposes. Final eligibility must be confirmed by the treating hospital or trial investigator.

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When to Consider

When Clinical Trials May Be Considered

Clinical trials are not suitable for every patient, but they may become important in specific situations. Patients often explore trials when standard treatments have stopped working, when the cancer has returned, when a rare mutation is found, or when advanced therapies are not available locally.

Clinical trial decisions should always be made carefully. The goal is not simply to find any trial, but to identify trials that match the patient's cancer biology, previous treatment history, current condition, and practical ability to travel or participate.

Patients may consider clinical trials when:

  • Standard treatment options are limited
  • Cancer has relapsed after previous treatment
  • Disease is refractory to chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or targeted therapy
  • A specific mutation or biomarker is present
  • Advanced cell therapy or gene therapy is being explored
  • Local options are unavailable or unaffordable
  • A second opinion suggests investigational treatment may be appropriate
Our Role

How CancerFax Helps You Explore Clinical Trial Options

CancerFax is not a general listing platform. We help patients and families make sense of clinical trial options with medical context, hospital coordination, and practical support โ€” reviewing diagnosis, treatment history, pathology, imaging, and molecular reports before suggesting whether a trial may be worth exploring.

01

Medical Report Review

We review diagnosis, stage, treatment history, pathology, scans, and molecular test reports before shortlisting trial options.

02

Trial Matching Support

We help identify trials based on cancer type, treatment history, mutation profile, country, and clinical condition.

03

Hospital Coordination

We communicate with hospitals, doctors, and trial teams to understand eligibility, availability, and next steps.

04

International Patient Support

For overseas trials, we assist with appointment coordination, documentation, travel planning, language support, and follow-up.

05

Realistic Guidance

We explain trial possibilities honestly, including eligibility limitations, timelines, risks, costs, and practical challenges.

06

Advanced Therapy Focus

CancerFax focuses strongly on advanced cancer treatments โ€” cell therapy, gene therapy, precision oncology, and investigational therapies.

For Trial Matching

Documents Needed to Check Clinical Trial Eligibility

Clinical trial eligibility depends on detailed medical information. To help evaluate whether a patient may qualify, the following reports are usually required.

Upload Reports for Trial Review โ†’
  • Latest medical summary
  • Histopathology report
  • Immunohistochemistry (IHC) report
  • Molecular / NGS report, if available
  • PET-CT, CT, or MRI reports
  • Previous chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, or radiation details
  • Surgery notes, if applicable
  • Recent blood test reports
  • Organ function reports
  • Discharge summaries
  • Current medication list
  • Performance status, if available
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Clinical Trial Eligibility Must Be Confirmed by the Treating Center

Clinical trial information on CancerFax is provided to help patients understand possible options. Final eligibility is always determined by the trial investigator, treating hospital, ethics committee, and applicable regulatory requirements.

A patient may appear suitable based on diagnosis but may still not qualify because of prior treatments, organ function, performance status, disease burden, infection status, blood counts, travel feasibility, or trial-specific criteria.

CancerFax helps patients explore options, but does not guarantee trial enrollment, treatment response, or clinical outcome.

Need Direction?

Not Sure Which Trial Is Right for You?

Many patients do not know which clinical trial to search for. That is completely understandable. Trial matching is complex and depends on many factors, including the cancer type, stage, prior treatments, genetic mutations, current health status, and location preference. Share your medical reports and our team will help assess whether any available trials may be worth exploring.

Request Clinical Trial Matching Support โ†’
Quick Answers

Clinical Trials, Briefly Explained

Direct answers to the questions patients and families ask most often when exploring trial options.

What are cancer clinical trials?

Cancer clinical trials are research studies that test new treatments, drug combinations, cell therapies, immunotherapies, targeted therapies, or diagnostic approaches in patients with cancer.

How can I find a cancer clinical trial?

You can search by cancer type, treatment, mutation, country, city, hospital, or trial phase. A medical report review is usually needed to confirm whether a trial may be suitable.

Can international patients join cancer clinical trials?

Some clinical trials accept international patients, but eligibility depends on the trial protocol, hospital policy, medical condition, travel feasibility, and follow-up requirements.

What documents are needed for clinical trial matching?

Patients usually need pathology reports, imaging reports, treatment history, molecular testing reports, blood tests, discharge summaries, and a current medical summary.

Frequently Asked

Questions Patients and Families Ask

Honest, clinically grounded answers to the most common questions we receive about cancer clinical trials.

Need Help Finding the Right Clinical Trial?

Finding a clinical trial can be difficult, especially when the cancer is advanced, relapsed, refractory, or mutation-driven. CancerFax helps patients and families review available options, understand eligibility requirements, and connect with appropriate hospitals or trial teams when suitable.