A Supportive and Flexible Experience for Every Participant

We are here to make every trial experience positive and supportive. With our experienced team, you are always in good hands.

We are an independent research center responsible for conducting clinical trials. Our study results are entirely independent, and sponsors have no influence over their content or conclusions.

See our open trials

Participating in a clinical trial means investing in your own health while contributing to medical advances

Patients are at the heart of every clinical trial. Without patients, carrying out trials would be impossible, and without trials, new medicines could not be developed. Participating in a clinical trial pays off because it gives you the possibility to receive the newest treatment and gain important insights into your current health. During the trial, you also have additional care and attention from the clinical trial staff and your health status is closely monitored. By participating you become part of the bigger picture whilst helping others and contributing to moving the medical science forward. Clinical trials offer hope and help us find answers in our efforts to treat and prevent diseases. Sometimes the findings are groundbreaking which not only benefits individual patients, but whole societies alike.

Got interested? We are constantly looking for new participants in our clinical trials. Read more about clinical trials below and get in touch with our study nurse if you think this could be your next step toward better health.

Our Upcoming Clinical Trials

Participating in a clinical trial means investing in your own health while contributing to medical advances.

We are currently recruiting participants for the following trials.

Participate in a Clinical Trial

The purpose of clinical trials is to investigate the safety and efficacy of investigational medicinal products in the treatment or prevention of diseases. Trials can also have other predefined objectives.

Need for clinical trials

Clinical trials support the development of medicines. They provide further information on the safety and efficacy of investigational medicinal products in the treatment or prevention of diseases. This can help develop new treatments and improve treatment outcomes. Improved outcomes not only benefit individual patients, but whole societies alike.

Trials in practise

In general, clinical trials include a recruitment and screening stage, an actual investigative treatment stage and a follow-up stage. During the trial, participants visit the clinic, and remote meetings are also possible. Participants can also reach out to the trial site themselves. Trials include blood tests, medical examinations and other trial-specific procedures, such as imaging.

Participating in clinical trials is voluntary. If you decide to participate in a clinical trial, we ask you to confirm your decision by signing an informed consent. However, you can withdraw your consent at any time without giving any reason. This withdrawal does not affect your right to receive treatment that you may require.

Both healthy volunteers and people with underlying diseases can register for clinical trials.

Timeline for our trials

We are constantly looking for new participants in clinical trials. If you are interested in participating, please reach out to our study nurse.

Potential benefits

It is not possible to assess reliably whether participating in a trial benefits the participant. However, clinical trials bring useful information that is needed to develop treatments and treat and prevent diseases.

Although no personal benefits can be guaranteed, clinical trials advance the development of medicines and can help someone else dealing with the same condition as yours.

Potential inconvenience

Investigational medicinal products can cause adverse events. If you participate in a trial, you will be told about the possible adverse events of the given product. Also, procedures included in the trial can cause inconvenience or discomfort. For each trial, your doctor will discuss these with you.

Participating in a trial requires certain amount of time to visit the clinic and fill out different questionnaires or study diary. However, visits to the clinic can be arranged flexibly to suit your own schedules.

Costs

For a participant, participating in clinical trials is free of charge. The investigational medicinal product and any procedures included in the trial will not cost you anything. Possible travel expenses are compensated based on receipts submitted.

Confidentiality and data protection

Personal data will be processed in clinical trials. Only personal data essential for the purpose of the trial will be entered in the trial register and data and samples collected will be encoded so that no individuals can be identified. At the trial site, the research staff is bound by confidentiality. If you decide to participate in a trial, you will be provided more information on data protection.

With Us, You Are Always in Good Hands

We are here to make your clinical trial experience as positive and supportive as possible. To help things feel less intimidating, we would like to introduce you to some of the most common terms used in clinical trials.

Clinical trial

Clinical trial is a study that investigates the safety and efficacy of an investigational medicinal product. Usually, the investigational product and its treatment outcomes are compared to another product or placebo. This is done by dividing the trial participants into groups (arms) according to a predefined protocol. Clinical trials always require a regulatory authority approval and ethics committee review. When you volunteer to take part in a clinical trial, you help doctors and researchers learn more about medicines and their ability to treat and prevent diseases.

Informed Consent

Participating in clinical trials is voluntary. Before a trial begins, the trial staff explains you the details of the trial. This helps you decide whether to participate. These details are included in a document called an informed consent form. “Informed” here means that you have been informed about all the key aspects of the trial and you have read and understood the materials given to you. If you decide to participate, you must then give your consent by voluntarily signing the document before entering the trial.

Investigational Medicinal Product / Study medication

An investigational medicinal product or study medication is an active ingredient or placebo that has been prepared for human use and is being tested or compared in a clinical trial. This is the product you will be given as part of your participation in the trial.

Placebo

In clinical trials, a placebo is a product that does not contain any active ingredients and thus, has no medical effects. The placebo effect is a positive or negative effect that a patient perceives after taking the placebo although they have not been given any medicine.

Indication

In clinical trials, indication refers to a health condition or disease for which a medicinal product is meant to be used. If we use a simple example, a commonly used painkiller ibuprofen is indicated among other for headache, i.e. it is used to alleviate the symptoms of headache.

Inclusion Criteria

When a person registers for a clinical trial, they need to meet certain predefined criteria to be considered for participation. These are called inclusion criteria. They can include common characteristics, such as age, gender and ethnicity, as well as specific characteristics, like diagnosis and stage of disease. For reliable results and safety, it is important to determine inclusion criteria carefully.

Exclusion Criteria

Exclusion criteria are certain predefined characteristics that exclude people from taking part in a trial. These might include, for example, general characteristics, like age and gender, or other medical conditions. Exclusion criteria are used to narrow down the target population and thus make sure the trial is safe and the results are reliable.

Screening

Screening is a phase in early stages of a clinical trial during which participants visit the trial site and their eligibility for the trial is assessed in more detail. Depending on the trial, these assessments can include a physical examination, laboratory tests and diagnostic tests, such as imaging. The purpose of these assessments is to make sure the inclusion/exclusion criteria of the trial have been adhered to. At the screening visit, some baseline data is also collected. This means participant’s health data that is used as a reference point when assessing health changes that occur in the course of the trial. It is only after passing the screening stage that participants are enrolled in the trial.

Blinding

The purpose of blinding is to make sure that trial participants, trial staff, or both, do not know which trial group (arm) a certain participant belongs to. A typical example of this is a trial that has one treatment arm and one placebo arm, and the participants do not know if they are receiving the active substance or the placebo. Blinding is used to make sure there is no bias in the trial.

Randomisation

In clinical trials, participants are often allocated to different groups (arms). One arm may, for example, receive the active substance, whereas the other arm receives the placebo. When participants are allocated to these arms randomly and by chance rather than choice, we talk about randomisation. This way, any participant can end up in any arm of the trial. For the reliability of the trial results, this is important.

Benefit-risk assessment

When investigating and developing medicines, benefit-risk assessment is an integral part of the process. The purpose of the assessment is to determine whether medicine’s benefits outweigh its risks in a specific condition.

Adverse event

An adverse event is an unintended and harmful response to a medicinal product. Adverse events can be mild, moderate or severe. In terms of medicinal products, adverse events are also classified according to their frequency from very common to very rare and not known events.

Phase

Clinical trials are conducted in four different steps which are called phases. Phases describe the different stages of medicine development and each of them deals with different research questions.

Marketing authorisation

Marketing authorisation is the approval given by a competent authority to market a certain medicine. The system of marketing authorisation and the assessments related to it are strict and regulated to make sure marketed medicines are sufficiently safe and effective.

Health-Related Quality of Life

Health-Related Quality of Life is a concept that aims to assess the medicine’s health benefits. This assessment is important in individual patient’s viewpoint but also generally as a means of measuring and evaluating treatment outcomes. Health-related quality of life reflects a person’s individual perception of how their disease or treatment affects their quality of life. Health-related quality of life includes physical, mental and social aspects related to a person’s disease or treatment and it is assessed using different metrics and questionnaires.

Sponsor

In clinical trials a sponsor is the entity that is responsible for initiating, managing, and often also funding a clinical trial. Often this entity is a pharmaceutical company, but in principle it can also be any other organisation, institution or government agency, such as a university or a university hospital.

Study Population

Participants in each trial form its study population, i.e. it is the group of individuals in a study. In a clinical trial, the inclusion and exclusion criteria determine who will and will not be included in the trial.