Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

A clinical trial is a research project conducted with men, women or children to determine if an investigational drug, device or procedure is safe and effective. Some other words that describe clinical research are study, protocol, survey or experiment.

  • Treatment trials test experimental treatments, new combinations of drugs, or new approaches to surgery or radiation therapy.
  • Prevention trials look for better ways to prevent disease in people who have never had the disease or to prevent a disease from returning. These approaches may include medicines, vitamins, vaccines, minerals, or lifestyle changes.
  • Diagnostic trials are conducted to find better tests or procedures for diagnosing a particular disease or condition.
  • Screening trials test the best way to detect certain diseases or health conditions.
  • Quality of Life trials (or Supportive Care trials) explore ways to improve comfort and the quality of life for individuals with a chronic illness.

When you participate in a clinical trial, you can play a more active role in your own health care, gain access to new research treatments before they are widely available, and help others by contributing to medical research.

All clinical trials have guidelines about who can participate. Often, clinical trials will list medical or other conditions that must be met in order to participate in a particular study. In addition, UC Davis encourages diversity in its clinical trial enrollments since the effects of diseases or conditions can vary with age, race, ethnicity, and gender.

Research is conducted in the laboratory, and often in animals, for many years before an investigational drug, device or procedure becomes available to clinical trial participants. Only the most promising new treatments make it to clinical trials, which are conducted to validate findings of this earlier research that indicated that the drug, device or procedure is safe in human participants. During the trial, physicians and medical staff will regularly and carefully monitor each participant to determine if the research is helpful and safe. However, there is always some level of risk, and side effects are possible. You will be fully informed of all risks before you start the study.

A clinical trial may or may not help you personally, but it will give researchers information about treating health conditions in the future. In most trials, you are randomly assigned to a control group or study group. The control group receives the currently approved medical treatment or a placebo. Cancer clinical trials are an exception since the best standard of care is always provided to the control group. The study group receives the investigational drug, device or procedure. If it becomes clear during a clinical trial that one treatment is better than another, the trial is stopped so that all participants receive the beneficial treatment.

Each clinical trial has a well-documented plan, or protocol, about what you will need to do and what is expected. You will be fully informed about the plan and everything that is known about the benefits and risks of the research. You can ask any questions at any time. If you decide to be in the trial, you will be asked to sign an "informed consent" form.

Clinical trials vary in length. Some are as short as a few hours or as long as a few years. You will be fully informed about how long you need to participate, and you may quit at any time.

Activities vary from one clinical trial to the next, but most require regular medical examinations. Some trials require taking either an approved or investigational drug, while others require a procedure. Sometimes you record information about how you are doing at home. You also may be asked to return for follow-up visits with the researcher so he or she can evaluate whether the research is working and is safe.

Clinical trial costs are either billed to the participant’s insurance or paid by the sponsor of the study. If you do not have insurance, the costs are often paid by the sponsor. Cancer clinical trials are an exception. California law requires most health insurers to cover the routine costs of cancer clinical trials. Some trials, especially those that require several visits to the researcher, may compensate you for your time and transportation.

If you agree to participate in a trial but later decide you want to drop out, you can do so with no change in your usual care.

If you would like to know the results of the trial, the researcher can contact you when the trial is over and he or she has tabulated and evaluated the results. However, some results may take years to obtain.

The information participants provide for a clinical trial is confidential. However, UC Davis may be required by law to share your information in certain situations. If the information from the trial is published or presented at scientific meetings, your name and other personal information will not be used. The clinical trial sponsor, as well as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, also may review the research files and medical records.

Most UC Davis Health departments and divisions conduct clinical trials. For more information about UC Davis clinical trials, please call 855-823-1660 or explore our Participate in Clinical Trials site. The National Institutes of Health also sponsors clinicaltrials.gov, which lists many clinical trials being conducted across the country.

UC Davis Health is committed to protecting personal privacy and personal information collected via its websites. Where research is concerned, we may disclose health information about you for research purposes, subject to the confidentiality provisions of state and federal law. For example, your health information may be reviewed to determine if you are eligible to participate in a research study. In addition to disclosing health information for research, researchers may contact patients regarding their interest in participating in certain research studies. UC Davis Health Notice of Privacy Practices provides detailed information about research-related and other disclosures of health Information.

You may be contacted for clinical trials at UC Davis and your leftover blood and/or tissue may be used for research purposes unless you opt out.

To opt out of being included in research studies, you may choose one of three ways. Please provide your full name and Medical Record Number

  1. Email: clinicaltrials@ucdavis.edu
  2. Call: 855-823-1660
  3. Write: CTSC Clinical Trials Office
    Attention: Recruitment Program
    UC Davis School of Medicine
    2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400
    Sacramento, CA 95817

You can change your mind about allowing your medical records or tissue to be used for research at any time.

  • If you would like to find out more about the kinds of research conducted at UC Davis or how your information or leftover samples are used for research, call 855-823-1660.
  • If you are concerned about your safety in connection with a research study, call the UC Davis Health Compliance Hotline at 800-403-4744.
  • If you have concerns regarding your privacy in connection with participating in research, call UC Davis Institutional Review Board (IRB) at 916-703-9158.