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Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Heart failure affects 6.7 million Americans and is the leading cause of hospital readmissions. Despite recent advances including SGLT2 inhibitors, it remains a serious and often progressive condition. Clinical trials are testing new drug classes, cardiac devices, gene therapies, and remote monitoring strategies that could significantly improve quality of life and reduce hospitalizations.

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Common questions about Heart Failure clinical trials

What are clinical trials for Heart Failure?

Clinical trials are research studies that test new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or approaches in human volunteers. For Heart Failure, trials may be testing novel therapies, comparing existing treatments, or studying how to better diagnose and prevent the condition. Participation is voluntary and trials follow strict ethical and safety protocols.

Who can join a Heart Failure trial?

Each trial has specific eligibility criteria — including factors like age, sex, diagnosis details, prior treatments, and overall health. Some trials seek patients with a specific diagnosis, while others look for healthy volunteers. Use Trial Finder to search trials that fit your profile and review the eligibility criteria before contacting a study team.

Is there a cost to participate?

In most clinical trials, the experimental treatment is provided at no cost to participants. Many trials also reimburse travel expenses. Trial Finder is completely free to use. Always confirm cost details directly with the trial team before enrolling.

How do I find Heart Failure trials near me?

Click the button above to search Trial Finder. You can filter by your state, travel distance, age, and trial phase. Our real-time data comes directly from ClinicalTrials.gov, the official U.S. registry of all federally and privately supported clinical studies.