The CLF Research Registry
The CLF Research Registry comprises the Brain Donation Registry (BDR) and the Clinical Research Registry (CRR).
Join the CLF Research Registry
The CLF Research Registry comprises the Brain Donation Registry (BDR) and the Clinical Research Registry (CRR). You may sign up for one or both.
CLF UK is proud to collaborate with the Jeff Astle Foundation and the University of Oxford for the Concussion Legacy Project, as well as members of the CLF Global Brain Bank: the UNITE Brain Bank, the Australian Sports Brain Bank, the Canadian Concussion Centre, the Neurological Foundation Human Brain Bank in New Zealand, and the University of Sao Paulo.
Brain donation is a generous act that helps raise awareness for concussion and CTE research and allows your family to know your wishes for brain donation after death. Brain Donation Registry members will receive a personalised digital brain donor card and informational packet on brain donation.
Browse our Brain Donation FAQ for more information or download our Brain Donation Overview Packet. For imminent brain donation matters, please contact the respective brain banks directly.
By signing up for the Clinical Research Registry, you’ll help accelerate clinical research studies on brain injuries and CTE led by research institutions across the UK.
Register today to begin receiving information on active studies for which you may be a fit. Thank you in advance for committing your time and effort to these important studies.
Research Registry Form
Learn More
Launched in September 2021, the Concussion Legacy Project is a brain bank formed through a partnership between the Concussion Legacy Foundation UK and the Jeff Astle Foundation. The Concussion Legacy Project is led by Dr. Gabriele De Luca, Professor of Clinical Neurology and Experimental Neuropathology in the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Oxford and Director of Clinical Neurosciences Undergraduate Education at Oxford Medical School.
Rugby World Cup winner and ex-Lion, Steve Thompson MBE became the first professional athlete to pledge his brain to the Concussion Legacy Project and now a new generation of players are following his lead.
For more about the Concussion Legacy Project and our global collaborators, including the impact that brain donation has had on our understanding of CTE, head to our brain banks page.
CTE is a global problem, but due to a lack of brain tissue, few researchers outside the United States were able to study this devastating disease. The Concussion Legacy Foundation founded the CLF Global Brain Bank to activate scientists from every corner of the globe in the fight against CTE.
Led by some of the world’s greatest researchers on brain trauma and CTE, the CLF Global Brain Bank has collaborators in Australia, Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, with plans for future growth.
For more about the CLF Global Brain Bank and the importance of brain donation around the world, visit our brain banks page.
Research is the key that unlocks our ability to prevent and treat the effects of brain trauma. Clinical research on human volunteers allows scientists to pick up on changes in the brain that lead to CTE while someone is alive, bringing us closer to being able to diagnose CTE during life.
The Concussion Legacy Foundation actively recruits for studies led by the Boston University CTE Center and renowned universities across the country. For more information on active studies, head to our clinical research page.