Home

vervolganalyses

Vervolganalyses, in research, are analyses conducted after the primary analysis or after data collection has ended to investigate additional outcomes, longer-term effects, or performance over time. They may be pre-specified as part of a study protocol or conducted post hoc to explore new questions arising from the data.

Common purposes include assessing durability of treatment effects, long-term safety, progression, or real-world effectiveness in follow-up

Key methodological considerations include handling missing data due to drop-out, censoring in time-to-event data, multiplicity from

Reporting focuses on the follow-up interval, sample size at follow-up, attrition reasons, the analytic method, and

Used across fields such as clinical trials, epidemiology, psychology, and health services research, they help determine

periods
(for
example,
six
months,
one
year,
or
multiple
years).
Methods
vary
with
data:
repeated
measures
and
longitudinal
analyses
(linear
mixed
models,
generalized
estimating
equations)
for
continuous
or
ordinal
outcomes;
time-to-event
or
survival
analyses
(Kaplan-Meier,
Cox
proportional
hazards)
for
incidents;
and
mixed-models
for
trajectory
analysis.
multiple
timepoints
or
endpoints,
and
potential
biases
from
non-random
loss
to
follow-up.
Pre-specification
in
the
study
protocol
helps
mitigate
bias;
when
not
pre-specified,
post
hoc
analyses
should
be
labeled
exploratory
with
cautious
interpretation.
the
robustness
of
findings
under
different
assumptions
about
missing
data.
Vervolganalyses
complement
the
primary
analysis
by
providing
information
on
longer-term
outcomes
but
are
generally
considered
less
definitive
without
prior
planning
and
adequate
follow-up.
whether
early
benefits
persist,
fade,
or
change
over
time
and
identify
late-emerging
risks.