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.

### 🔍 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

### 📅 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)

### 🧪 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

### 🧾 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 09:02
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