NCT07005895 · RECRUITING

Feasibility of Using the Gatorade Sports Science Institute (GSSI) Labs App for Hydration Related Outcomes

This study tests whether a Gatorade-branded smartphone app can reliably collect hydration data from everyday people at home. Participants use the app alongside a wearable fitness tracker and a bathroom scale. There is no assigned phase — this is a feasibility study, meaning researchers are simply checking whether the app works as a research tool, not testing a medical treatment.

You may qualify if

  • 18-65 years of age, inclusive
  • Male or female. If female, subject is not pregnant, planning to get pregnant, or currently breast feeding
  • Able to speak, write, and read English
  • Provision of written consent to participate
  • Owns and wears an activity tracker daily, including during sleep, except when submerged underwater (i.e., swimming, bathing) and is willing to connect their device to the app, per GSSI Labs App requirements (Oura, WHOOP, Apple Watch, Garmin, Polar, Withings, or Fitbit).
  • Owns a bathroom scale
  • Able to drink 600mL (600 mL = 20 oz = 2 ½ cups) of water as directed.
  • Willing to avoid alcohol consumption 24 hours prior to study session(s)

You're excluded if

  • Subject is currently enrolled in a clinical trial or has participated in a clinical trial within the past 30 days.
  • Subject is employed by, or has a parent, guardian, or other immediate family member employed by a company that manufactures any products that compete with any Gatorade product. If subject is unsure if a company would be considered a competitor to Gatorade, they will be asked to please let the study investigator know the name of the other company and the nature of their relationship to that company before they sign the informed consent.

The sponsor's own eligibility wording, lightly reformatted. The study team makes the final eligibility decision — worth discussing with your doctor.

Eligibility criteria as of 2025-06-05

View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov

All APOE4 clinical trials