🧪 Comparative Cohort Study
A comparative cohort study is a type of observational study in which two or more groups (cohorts) of individuals are followed over time and compared based on exposure to different interventions, treatments, or risk factors.
📚 Key Characteristics: Not randomized: Participants are not assigned randomly to groups. The study observes what happens in real-life conditions.
Prospective or retrospective:
Prospective: Groups are followed from the present into the future.
Retrospective: Researchers look back at existing data or records.
Comparison: At least two groups are compared based on a defined variable (e.g., drug A vs. drug B).
Outcomes measured: Includes survival, progression, adverse effects, etc.
🏥 Example (from your study): Patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were divided into two groups based on whether they received lenvatinib or donafenib, and their survival and safety outcomes were compared retrospectively.
⚠️ Limitations: Susceptible to bias (selection bias, confounding).
Cannot establish causality—only associations.
Relies on quality and completeness of available data.