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Trust & transparency

How Aymon works

Aymon turns the details you share into a focused search of the public clinical-trial registry, then explains where each trial may fit. Here is what happens behind the scenes — and where the limits are.

The search loop

From a broad registry search to a shortlist you can discuss.

  1. Share what you know

    Start with condition, age, sex at birth, location, and a few details that help avoid obviously irrelevant trials.

  2. Aymon reads trial criteria

    It compares public registry requirements with your answers and keeps uncertainty visible instead of hiding it.

  3. Review potential matches

    You get a focused list with applicability, eligibility, logistics, and questions to confirm with the trial site.

Where trial information comes from

Every trial Aymon shows comes from ClinicalTrials.gov, the public registry maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine. Aymon does not run its own registry and shows when a trial’s information was last checked, so you can judge how current it is. Registry entries can be incomplete or out of date; the study team is always the authoritative source.

How matching works

From the details you provide, Aymon retrieves a broad set of potentially relevant trials and then compares each one against what you shared — condition, location, and the answers you give to follow-up questions. For each trial it shows three plain-language dimensions:

  • Applicability — whether the trial is broadly about your situation.
  • Eligibility — what the trial’s requirements appear to be, and which are met, unmet, or still unknown.
  • Logistics — practical fit, such as whether a site is within your travel radius.

Trials are ordered by overall fit, and the ordering is never sponsored or paid for.

How Aymon uses AI

Clinical-trial eligibility criteria are written for researchers, not patients. Aymon uses AI (large language models) to read those published criteria and compare them against the information you provide, so the results are easier to understand. The AI’s job is to interpret and organise published text — it does not examine you, access medical records, or make a medical judgment.

AI can misread or oversimplify. Aymon is designed to be explicit about uncertainty rather than to sound confident, and it routes anything it cannot determine to “needs confirmation” with a clinician or the trial site.

What Aymon does not do

  • It does not diagnose or give medical advice.
  • It does not decide whether you are eligible for a trial or tell you to join one.
  • It does not contact trial sites or enrol you in a study.
  • It does not replace your clinician or the trial site, who remain the final authorities.

Ready to try it?

Create a free account and run a search. Your search details stay private to your session. For the full picture, see the Privacy page.

Find clinical trials

Aymon

A clearer way to explore clinical trials. Aymon surfaces trials that may be relevant — it does not determine eligibility or give medical advice.

Trial information comes from ClinicalTrials.gov. Results are potential matches, not final eligibility. Your clinician and the trial site remain the final authorities. Ranking is not sponsored.