A clearer way to explore clinical trials.
Aymon helps patients and caregivers find clinical trials that may be relevant, understand what they involve, and prepare for a conversation with a clinician.
Potential matches only — your clinician or the trial site confirms eligibility.
What you’ll see
Each trial, rewritten so you can actually read it.
Listings on ClinicalTrials.gov are dense and written for researchers. Aymon turns each potential match into plain language — where you might fit, where you might not, and the specific things a clinician or trial site still needs to confirm. Answer a question or two and the match sharpens as you go.
- Sourced from
- ClinicalTrials.gov
- Always framed as
- Potential matches, not eligibility
- Confirmed by
- Your clinician and the trial site
A study of an investigational inhaled therapy for moderate COPD
NCT0•••••• · View on ClinicalTrials.gov
Applicability
Applicable
Eligibility
Some unknowns
Logistics
In radius
Why it may be relevant
- Recruiting adults with a diagnosis of moderate COPD.
- Enrolling sites within your reported travel radius.
Needs confirmation
- Whether your most recent lung-function result meets the entry range.
Your input
Have you used a daily inhaler in the last 3 months?
From search to discussion
How Aymon works
The flow stays deliberately plain: share what you know, compare published trial requirements, and leave with questions worth taking to a clinician.
Tell us about you
Share a few details about the condition, location, and situation. “Not sure” is always a valid answer — you do not need medical records to begin.
Aymon searches ClinicalTrials.gov
Aymon retrieves registered trials and uses AI to compare each one against what you shared, explaining where the match is clear and where it is uncertain.
Review potential matches
See trials that may be relevant, ordered by fit, with plain-language questions you can take into a conversation with your clinician.
For patients and the people who help them
Aymon is designed for the real searching moment: uncertain, practical, and often shared with someone else.
Searching for yourself
Explore trials at your own pace, in ordinary language, without committing to anything. Aymon helps you understand what a trial involves before you ever contact a site.
Helping someone else
Caregivers and family can search on behalf of another adult or a child. You stay in control of what you share, and nothing replaces the care team’s judgment.
Evidence and limits
Built to be honest about uncertainty
Aymon should make trial information easier to review, without pretending that software can make the final clinical decision.
Read how matching, AI, and privacy work- Trial information comes from ClinicalTrials.gov, and Aymon shows when it was last checked.
- AI helps interpret and compare published trial requirements — it does not make a medical judgment.
- Results are potential matches, not final eligibility. Clinicians and trial sites remain the final authorities.
- Your clinical search details are used only for that search and are not saved to your account.
- Ranking is never sponsored.
Frequently asked questions
Is Aymon a medical service?
No. Aymon is an information tool that helps you explore clinical trials. It does not diagnose, give medical advice, or decide whether you can join a trial. Always talk to your clinician.
Does Aymon decide if I am eligible?
No. Aymon highlights trials that may be relevant and explains where requirements are met, unmet, or unclear. Only a clinician and the trial site can confirm eligibility.
Where does the trial information come from?
From ClinicalTrials.gov, the public registry of clinical studies. Aymon shows when each trial’s information was last checked so you know how current it is.
How is my information used?
The details you enter for a search are used only to run that search during your session. They are not saved to your account. See the Privacy page for the full picture.
Does Aymon use AI?
Yes. AI helps read and compare the requirements that trials publish, so the results are easier to understand. The How it works page explains this in more detail.
Do I need an account?
Yes — a free account is required to run a search. This keeps the service fair and sustainable. Creating an account takes a moment with email or Google.
Start with what you know
Ready to explore trials that may be relevant?
Create a free account and start a search. It takes a moment, and your search details stay private to your session.