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Research Explained9 min read

How to Read Clinical Trial Results: Hazard Ratios, P-Values, and What They Actually Mean

By Tidera Health Editorial Team·

A clinical trial result with a hazard ratio of 0.72 and a p-value of 0.003 — what does that actually mean? This guide makes clinical statistics readable.

About this article: Educational and informational only. Does not constitute medical advice or eligibility guidance. Always discuss clinical trial options with your care team. Verify current trial status at ClinicalTrials.gov.

What You Need to Know

When a clinical trial reports results, the numbers can seem impenetrable. This guide explains hazard ratios, p-values, NNT, and how to judge whether a result matters to patients.

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How Tidera Health Can Help

Tidera Health searches ClinicalTrials.gov in real time and uses AI to explain which trials may be relevant to your condition, age, location, and treatment history. It's free, requires no account, and stores no health data.

Enter your condition and location to see currently recruiting trials matched to your profile — with plain-English eligibility explanations and questions to ask the research coordinator.

Topics

how to read clinical trial resultshazard ratio explainedp-value clinical trialNNT clinical trialclinical trial statistics

Find recruiting trials for your condition

Enter your condition, age, and location. We search ClinicalTrials.gov in real time and explain each trial in plain English. Free, no account required.