Parkinson's Clinical Trials in Washington, DC, District of Columbia
The Washington, DC area gives families access to two distinct research clusters at once: the District's university hospitals and the NIH-anchored Maryland suburbs to the north.
A 50-mile radius from the District reaches well into Maryland (including the Baltimore corridor) and across the Potomac into Northern Virginia, so the list here is usually broader than the city limits alone would suggest. Government and academic centers in the region run a steady mix of observational and interventional Parkinson's studies, and many also reimburse travel from elsewhere in the mid-Atlantic.
- Recruiting trials near Washington, DC: 17
- Research sites: 15
- By phase: 1 Phase 1, 3 Phase 2, 2 Phase 3, 1 Phase 4
Research sites near Washington, DC
- National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (Bethesda, Maryland) — 6.1 mi away — 5 recruiting trials
- Johns Hopkins (Baltimore, Maryland) — 34.9 mi away — 2 recruiting trials
- University of Maryland (Baltimore, Maryland) — 34.9 mi away — 2 recruiting trials
- Georgetown University (Washington D.C., District of Columbia) — 0.8 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- Georgetown University (Neurology) (Washington D.C., District of Columbia) — 0.8 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- MedStar Georgetown University Hospital (Washington D.C., District of Columbia) — 0.8 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- The George Washington University (Washington D.C., District of Columbia) — 0.8 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- University of Maryland (College Park, Maryland) — 7.4 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- MedStar Georgetown University Hospital Department of Neurology (McLean, Virginia) — 7.8 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- Kaiser Permanente Midatlantic States (Rockville, Maryland) — 13.7 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- Inova Neurology (Fairfax, Virginia) — 15.1 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- MedStar Montgomery Medical Center (Olney, Maryland) — 17.1 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- Johns Hopkins Hospital - Neurology (Baltimore, Maryland) — 34.9 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Maryland) — 34.9 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
- University of Maryland, Baltimore (Baltimore, Maryland) — 34.9 mi away — 1 recruiting trial
Who is running Parkinson's trials near Washington, DC
- National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) — 4 trials
- Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research — 2 trials
- AskBio Inc — 1 trial
- Bayer — 1 trial
- BlueRock Therapeutics — 1 trial
- Gregory Wallace — 1 trial
- Hoffmann-La Roche — 1 trial
- Impax Laboratories, LLC — 1 trial
How to find a Parkinson's trial in Washington, DC
- Open the Washington, DC trial list, which is pre-filtered to a 50 mile radius around the city centre.
- Read each trial's family-friendly summary and five-word goal to understand what is being tested.
- Open the trial page for site contact details, eligibility criteria, and the phase.
- Sign up for the free Monday digest if you would like an email when new Washington, DC trials open.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I find a Parkinson's clinical trial near me?
- Enter your city, zip code, or postcode and a search radius. Parkinson's Pathways finds every recruiting Parkinson's trial with a study site inside that radius, sorted by distance. Each result links to a family-friendly summary, a five-word goal, and the site contact details.
- Are these Parkinson's clinical trials free to join?
- Yes. There is no cost to participate in a clinical trial. Study-related care, treatment, and assessments are paid for by the trial sponsor. Some trials also reimburse travel, parking, and lodging when the site is far from your home.
- How far should I be willing to travel for a Parkinson's trial?
- Most participants travel between 25 and 50 miles for routine visits. For a high-priority disease-modifying trial, families sometimes travel further, especially because some early-phase trials only run at a handful of academic medical centers. Many sites help with travel costs when the distance is significant.
- Who runs these clinical trials?
- Parkinson's clinical trials are run by academic medical centers, university hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, biotech startups, and patient foundations like The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Every trial listed here is registered with the U.S. National Library of Medicine on ClinicalTrials.gov.
- How often are the local trial listings updated?
- Every day. The full list refreshes from ClinicalTrials.gov each morning, so a trial that started recruiting yesterday will appear today. Trials that stop recruiting are removed automatically.
- Do I need a Parkinson's diagnosis to enroll in a local trial?
- Most trials require a confirmed Parkinson's diagnosis from a neurologist, but some recruit healthy volunteers as a comparison group, and a few recruit people at risk for Parkinson's based on family history or early symptoms. Each trial's eligibility section spells out who can join.
- What if there are no Parkinson's trials near my city right now?
- Try increasing the search radius to 100 or 250 miles, or sign up for the free weekly digest. Spencer sends a Monday email summarizing every new recruiting Parkinson's trial, so you can catch one the day it opens near you.
Trials in other cities
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Boston, Massachusetts
- New York, New York
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Miami, Florida
- Tampa, Florida
- Orlando, Florida
- Charlotte, North Carolina
- Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina
- Nashville, Tennessee
- Chicago, Illinois
- Cleveland, Ohio
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Columbus, Ohio
- Detroit, Michigan