Clinical Trials
Cancer clinical trials — recruiting now
We aggregate active recruiting oncology clinical trials from ClinicalTrials.gov — the U.S. National Library of Medicine registry. Browse by cancer type, then filter by state.
Showing 5,400 trials across 22 cancer types. Data last refreshed .
Survival in context
Where does your cancer fall?
Across 22 major cancer types — roughly 1.9M new U.S. diagnoses a year — 5-year relative survival averages 71.3%. 16 of 22 types sit above 50%; 8 sit above 75%.
Five-year survival for all cancers combined has nearly doubled since the 1970s. Active clinical trials are where the next gains come from — find your type below.
- Thyroid Cancer 98.4%
- Prostate Cancer 97.9%
- Testicular Cancer 94.9%
- Melanoma 94.7%
- Breast Cancer 91.7%
- Endometrial Cancer 81.1%
- Bladder Cancer 79%
- Kidney Cancer 78.6%
- Lymphoma 74.2%
- Head and Neck Cancer 69.5%
- Cervical Cancer 68%
- Leukemia 67.8%
- Sarcoma 66%
- Colorectal Cancer 65.4%
- Multiple Myeloma 62.4%
- Ovarian Cancer 51.6%
- Stomach Cancer 37.9%
- Brain Cancer 33%
- Lung Cancer 28.1%
- Liver Cancer 22%
- Esophageal Cancer 21.9%
- Pancreatic Cancer 13.3%
What this shows: 5-year relative survival is the percentage of people diagnosed who are alive five years later, compared to the general population. These are population-wide figures — individual outcomes depend heavily on stage at diagnosis, subtype, age, and treatment. Ask your oncologist how your specific case compares. Source: NCI SEER Cancer Stat Facts.
Browse trials by cancer type
Breast Cancer
300The most common cancer in women in the U.S. Clinical trials test new therapies for early-stage, locally advanced, and metastatic breast cancer.
Lung Cancer
300Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Trials focus on targeted therapies, immunotherapy, and combination regimens.
Prostate Cancer
300The most common cancer in men in the U.S. Trials test hormonal, radiation, surgical, and novel therapies across risk groups.
Colorectal Cancer
300Cancer of the colon or rectum. Trials span screening, adjuvant therapy, and metastatic disease.
Pancreatic Cancer
300One of the most aggressive cancers. Clinical trials are often the most direct path to access promising new therapies.
Ovarian Cancer
300Epithelial ovarian cancer and related gynecologic malignancies. Trials focus on PARP inhibitors, immunotherapy, and maintenance strategies.
Leukemia
300Cancers of the blood and bone marrow. Clinical trial participation is historically higher for leukemia than most solid tumors.
Lymphoma
300Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma subtypes. Trials explore CAR-T therapy, bispecific antibodies, and relapsed/refractory regimens.
Brain Cancer
300Primary brain tumors including glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), lower-grade gliomas, and other CNS malignancies.
Head and Neck Cancer
300Cancers of the oral cavity, pharynx, larynx, and salivary glands. HPV-driven and smoking-driven subtypes behave differently; trials often stratify on HPV status.
Cervical Cancer
300Largely HPV-driven. Trials span prevention, early-stage (often curable with surgery + radiation), and advanced/metastatic disease.
Sarcoma
286Rare cancers of bone and soft tissue. Many subtypes with distinct biology. Specialized sarcoma centers often run trials unavailable elsewhere.
Multiple Myeloma
268Plasma cell malignancy. Trials test CAR-T, bispecific antibodies, and combination regimens in newly diagnosed and relapsed/refractory settings.
Melanoma
252The most serious form of skin cancer. Trials span adjuvant, neoadjuvant, and metastatic disease — with major advances in immunotherapy.
Stomach Cancer
213Gastric adenocarcinoma. Trials test perioperative chemo-immunotherapy, HER2-targeted agents, and novel therapies for advanced disease.
Kidney Cancer
203Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and related kidney malignancies.
Bladder Cancer
198Urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. Non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive disease both have active trial programs.
Liver Cancer
197Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and related primary liver malignancies.
Endometrial Cancer
189The most common gynecologic cancer in the U.S. Trials focus on hormonally driven subtypes, MSI-H/dMMR immunotherapy, and advanced disease.
Esophageal Cancer
184Squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. Trials explore combination chemoradiation, immunotherapy, and perioperative regimens.
Thyroid Cancer
81Papillary, follicular, medullary, and anaplastic thyroid carcinomas. Most are highly curable; trials focus on advanced and recurrent disease.
Testicular Cancer
29Highly curable germ cell tumors. Trials focus on reducing toxicity of curative therapy and treating relapsed/refractory disease.
About this data: Every trial on this site is sourced directly from ClinicalTrials.gov — the U.S. National Library of Medicine registry of public and privately supported clinical studies. We fetch the data periodically and link back to the canonical ClinicalTrials.gov study page for the most current information.
This is not medical advice. Eligibility for a clinical trial is determined by the trial's investigators. Contact the trial site directly or speak with your oncologist before enrolling.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 · last fetch 2026-05-11