Research and clinical trials for bone cancer

All treatments must be fully researched before they can be adopted as standard treatment for everyone. This is so that we can be sure they work better than the treatments we already use and so we know that they are safe.

This section is about research into cancer that starts in your bone. This is called primary bone cancer. Some of the research is looking at:

  • the causes
  • improving treatment
  • tests to diagnose
  • ways to monitor primary bone cancer

Talk to your specialist if there are any clinical trials that you think you might be able to take part in. 

If your cancer has spread into bone from another part of the body, it is called metastatic or secondary bone cancer.

Research into primary bone cancer

There are several clinical trials for bone cancer in the UK.

Find a clinical trial

Our clinical trials database has open, closed and result summaries of trials in the UK.

What clinical trials are

Trials aim to find out if a new treatment or procedure is safe or better than a current treatment.

What you should know before

Find out about what researchers should tell you before you agree to take part in a trial.
Last reviewed: 
16 Sep 2024
Next review due: 
16 Sep 2027