Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. In medical and clinical research, **follow-up** refers to: > **The ongoing observation and assessment of a patient or study participant over some time after an initial treatment, diagnosis, or intervention.** --- ### ๐ **Purposes of Follow-Up** - **Monitor disease progression or recurrence** (e.g., tumor recurrence after surgery) - **Evaluate treatment outcomes** (e.g., functional recovery, complications) - **Detect late-onset side effects** - **Ensure adherence to therapy or rehabilitation** - **Collect long-term data** for research or registries --- ### ๐ **Types of Follow-Up** - **Short-term follow-up**: days to weeks (e.g., postoperative wound healing) - **Long-term follow-up**: months to years (e.g., survival, relapse rates in cancer) --- ### ๐งช **In Research Studies** Follow-up is crucial to: - Assess **primary and secondary endpoints** - Calculate **outcome measures** like survival rate, recurrence, or treatment efficacy - Reduce **loss to follow-up**, which can introduce bias --- ### ๐งพ Example in a Study > "All patients were followed up every 6 months with MRI and endocrine tests for at least 5 years." This means researchers kept evaluating the patients' status regularly to track outcomes and complications. follow_up.txt Last modified: 2025/04/06 09:02by 127.0.0.1