Frequently asked questions
Need to talk to a person? See Get Help →
How does the matching work?
We read the eligibility criteria on every relevant recruiting trial on ClinicalTrials.gov and compare them against the profile you shared with us. We use AI to translate the criteria into plain language and flag what fits, what might rule you out, and what needs confirmation with your care team.
Is this medical advice?
No. Threshold Trials is an information tool. It helps you find trials to ask about — it does not tell you whether to enroll, and it cannot replace a conversation with your doctor.
What happens to my documents?
We read them and delete them immediately. Your original files are never stored on our servers. The information we extract is stored in your profile, which you can delete at any time.
Can I trust these results?
The results are a starting point, not a verdict. AI can misread eligibility criteria or miss context that a clinician would catch. Every match should be verified with your care team before you act on it.
What does “likely fit” mean?
It means the major eligibility criteria appear to match your profile and no major exclusions were found. It does not mean you qualify — only the trial's screening process can determine that.
Why didn’t anything match?
Several reasons are possible: the trials available right now may require disease characteristics not in your profile, your treatment history may overlap with exclusion criteria, or the profile may be missing information that would help us match more accurately. New trials open every week — we'll let you know if something changes.