Post hoc observational cohort study

A 'post hoc observational cohort study' is a type of observational cohort study in which a retrospective analysis is conducted using data that was already collected, usually for a different original purpose.

  • Observational: No intervention is applied; researchers analyze associations within existing data.
  • Cohort: The study population is a defined group followed over time.
  • Post hoc: The analysis was not pre-specified in the original study protocol; it is performed after data collection.
  • Retrospective: Uses previously gathered data such as medical records, registries, or clinical trial datasets.
  • Exploratory: Aims to generate hypotheses rather than establish causation.
  • Increased risk of bias (e.g., selection, confounding).
  • Associations found are not necessarily causal.
  • Limited to the quality and completeness of existing data.

A clinical trial dataset on aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, initially collected to study vasospasm, could later be analyzed post hoc to explore whether initial systolic blood pressure correlates with 3-month outcomes.

  • post_hoc_observational_cohort_study.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/12 09:48
  • by administrador