Medical Disclaimer
MatchMedi is patient education, not medical advice.
MatchMedi provides patient education and source navigation. It does not provide medical advice, diagnose any condition, choose or rank treatments, or decide whether a clinical trial fits you. It is not a substitute for the judgment of your own qualified clinicians.
No doctor–patient relationship
Reading this site, using its tools, or contacting us does not create a doctor–patient, provider–patient, or other professional relationship. Always seek the advice of your oncology team or other qualified health provider with any questions about your condition, and never disregard or delay professional advice because of something you read here.
In an emergency
Do not use this site for medical emergencies. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. If you are in emotional crisis or thinking about self-harm, call or text 988 (U.S. Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or your local crisis service.
Accuracy and currency
We curate from authoritative sources (such as NCI, ClinicalTrials.gov, and the FDA) and attribute them on every page. Medical knowledge changes, and content here may become out of date between reviews. Where our framing and a cited source differ, the original source controls. Confirm anything important with your care team and the primary source.
No paid medical reviewers at this stage
MatchMedi does not employ paid medical reviewers at this stage. Clinical content is sourced from peer-reviewed and authoritative sources with attribution; we add navigation, family-facing framing, and questions to bring to your oncology team. Every clinical claim points back to a source. This site is not a substitute for your oncology team.
Clinical trials
Trial listings are leads for conversation, drawn from public registries that may be incomplete or delayed. We never confirm eligibility. Contact the trial team to confirm whether a study is appropriate for you.
Community content
Community and cohort stories are individual lived experience, not medical advice, and are not vetted by clinicians. They may help you form questions; they do not establish what anyone should take, stop, combine, or dose.