Request an Appointment
DHAT Research Institute
At DHAT, our clinical trial treatment options include the following conditions:
- Celiac Disease
- Cirrhosis
- Clostridioides difficile
- Colorectal Cancer
- Crohn’s
- Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE)
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
- Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)/NAFLD
- Ulcerative Colitis
What Is A Clinical Trial?
Clinical trials are medical research studies performed on people to determine whether new medical approaches, treatments, therapies, or devices are safe and effective. Doctors use clinical trials to learn how diseases start and progress, find new ways to improve health care, develop new therapies and preventive measures, and monitor treatment changes over time. Clinical trials are the stepping-stones to market a drug or other therapy.
What are the four phases of clinical trials?
Clinical trials advance through four phases to test a treatment, find the appropriate dosage, and look for side effects.
- Phase 1 – Designed to test safety and tolerability, Phase 1 typically involves a small number of healthy volunteers.
- Phase 2 – More participants are involved in Phase 2 to measure the drug’s effectiveness. Additional dosing information may be obtained.
- Phase 3 – Studies conducted during Phase 3 of a clinical trial will involve large groups of patients or very large groups of participants with a specific disease the trial drug intends to impact. Researchers also compare results among those taking the experimental drug with results from those who are taking a placebo. Drug intervention testing may also be used in combination with other medications or treatments during Phase 3. If, after all these tests prove safe and effective, the FDA approves it for clinical use.
- Phase 4 – During Phase 4 clinical trials, researchers test the drug or medical device’s effectiveness, safety, and side effects after it has been approved by the FDA. In Phase 4 studies, doctors monitor how people use the drug long-term.
Preclinical
Several Years
Phase 1
Months
Phase 2
Months to Years
Phase 3
Years to Decades
Phase 4
Ongoing
Preclinical
Several Years
Phase 1
Months
Phase 2
Months to Years
Phase 3
Years to Decades
Phase 4
Ongoing
Why Partcipate in a Clinical Trial?
Clinical trials are a vital part of the research process, helping scientists to find new, better ways to treat patients. DHAT is proud to offer clinical trial participants personalized care, cutting-edge medications and treatments, and highly individualized care tailored to their lifestyle at no cost—resulting in more frequent and individualized treatments than are likely obtained elsewhere.
Common reasons to participate in a clinical trial include:
- All other treatment options have been exhausted to no avail, and no further treatment options are readily available
- To obtain access to advanced treatments and protocols for their disease before the protocol becomes available to the general public
- To help researchers learn more about the impact of the trial protocol to benefit others
- To obtain access to medications and treatments required for their condition, free of cost throughout the trial