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Find clinical trials without the wall of form fields

Trial searches usually start with thirty form fields and end in jargon. Here, you describe the situation the way you'd tell a nurse: the diagnosis, a mutation if you know it, age, where you live. We turn it into a proper search of ClinicalTrials.gov. Check what we understood, adjust anything, and get trials worth asking your care team about.

Whatever you have: the diagnosis, a mutation if you know it, age, where you live.

How this works

  1. You describe it once. AI reads your description and pulls out the clinical details: the condition, any mutation, age, sex, location. Names and anything identifying are dropped.
  2. You check what we understood. The search criteria show up as tags you can edit or remove, so a wrong guess never becomes a wrong search.
  3. We search the real registry. Results come straight from ClinicalTrials.gov (the same source your oncologist uses), filtered to trials whose age and sex requirements fit, with each trial's own plain-language summary.

One honest limitation: matching here means the trial is worth a conversation, not that anyone qualifies. Eligibility depends on details only your care team knows: treatment history, test results, overall health. Bring the NCT numbers to your next appointment.

What we will never do with your records

This generator runs without an account, and KeptWell itself makes the same promises to every family, regardless of plan or price.

We won't sell your data.
Not to advertisers, not to data brokers, not to insurers, not to pharma, not to anyone, in any form, ever.
We won't train AI models on your records.
Anthropic (whose Claude model powers KeptWell) is contractually prohibited from training on anything we send them, under a signed Business Associate Agreement.
We won't lock you in.
You can export everything in your circle as a ZIP at any time. Cancellation is one click.

Read the full data practices →

Common questions

Is this clinical trial finder really free?
Yes. You describe the situation, we search ClinicalTrials.gov and show you what matches. No account, no payment, no email required. Nothing you type is saved, and it never appears in our logs.
Where does the trial data come from?
Directly from ClinicalTrials.gov, the U.S. National Library of Medicine's registry of clinical studies. We show the data as they publish it, with the date we retrieved it. The registry is updated every weekday.
Does showing up in the results mean the patient qualifies?
No, and be wary of any tool that says otherwise. These are trials worth asking your care team about. Every trial has detailed eligibility criteria that the trial's own doctors evaluate, and many depend on test results and treatment history that only your medical team knows in full.
What should I do with a trial that looks promising?
Bring it to your oncologist or care team, and mention the NCT number (the ID starting with NCT on each result). They can tell you whether it's a genuine fit and refer you to the trial site. Trials also list their own contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov.
Why does a mutation like KRAS or EGFR matter?
Many newer cancer trials target a specific gene change in the tumor rather than the cancer's location in the body. If a pathology or genomic report mentions a mutation, adding it here often surfaces the most relevant trials. It's the single most useful detail you can include.

Found trials worth discussing? Keep them next to the records.

The next step is a conversation with the care team, and that goes better when the scans, labs, and trial details live in one place everyone in the family can see. That's what KeptWell is: the binder, but it understands what's inside.

Get started

No password. We'll email you a sign-in link — it works whether you're new here or already have an account.