BioMed Central Blog

Locate clinical trials that are of interest to you with the new UK Clinical Trials Gateway
BioMed Central are proud to be working with the National Institute for
Health Research (NIHR) to help them create and launch their new online resource
UKCTG - UK Clinical Trials Gateway.
Professor
Dame Sally C. Davies, Chief Medical Officer (
“I am
extremely pleased to announce that phase 2 of the UK Clinical Trials Gateway is
now available for people to try out. It
will increase transparency in research and will make it easy for patients,
their doctors and carers, friends and families to see what clinical trials are
taking place, what each trial is about, where it is taking place, and who is
running it. The NIHR will go on working
to improve it.”
The information will be taken from a variety of national registers that
are publicly available, allowing you to search a number of different
international trial registries. This means that it can include trials that may
be run from other countries but which have part of the study taking place in
the UK.
One of the primary aims of the Gateway is to make trial information
available to everyone for whom it is relevant ensuring the Government meet its
commitment in the NHS Constitution.
The gateway is designed to be simple to use and this starts with the
search function whereby trials can be found either by a broad keyword search or
using a more specific query such as trial ID, funder or sponsor depending upon
the information you have at hand.
One important aspect of the UKCTG is the lay summary where the trials have been
translated from high-level medical language into a more friendly version,
making the trial information much more accessible for patients, trialists and
casual readers alike. This helps the Government meet its commitment in the NHS
Constitution that the NHS will ensure that patients are made aware of research
that is of particular relevance to them.
The UKCTG is being run by the NIHR on behalf of all the UK Health Departments. We are
also being helped by a number of clinical research charities, research
professionals and patient representatives including consultancy from Current Controlled Trials (CCT) Ltd.
Posted by Mike Hallworth at 10:10 Comments (0)




