TY - JOUR
T1 - Participant Retention in a Prospective Multicenter Cohort of Participants With Pancreatitis and Factors Associated With Attrition
AU - on Behalf of the Consortium for the Study of Chronic Pancreatitis, Diabetes, and Pancreas Cancer (CPDPC)
AU - Choate, Radmila
AU - Xu, Jun
AU - Easler, Jeffrey J.
AU - Han, Samuel
AU - Phillips, Anna E.
AU - Bellin, Melena D.
AU - Fisher, William E.
AU - Fogel, Evan L.
AU - Forsmark, Chris
AU - Hart, Phil A.
AU - Pandol, Stephen J.
AU - Park, Walter G.
AU - Serrano, Jose
AU - Van Den Eeden, Stephen K.
AU - Vege, Santhi Swaroop
AU - Li, Liang
AU - Conwell, Darwin L.
AU - Yadav, Dhiraj
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Objectives: – Participant retention is essential in prospective studies to minimize bias and maintain validity. This study aimed to estimate retention rates and identify factors influencing attrition in a multicenter cohort (PROCEED) of US adults with acute/recurrent acute pancreatitis (AP/RAP) and chronic pancreatitis (CP). Methods: – Participants from the PROCEED study with AP/RAP or CP eligible for follow-up within the designated visit window were included. Retention was defined as completing at least one follow-up visit during the observation period. Retention was analyzed by follow-up mode (in-person and/or medical record review) and disease type (AP/RAP and CP). Retention factors were assessed using univariate analyses (Wilcoxon rank-sum for continuous variables, χ2/Fisher's exact for categorical) and multivariable logistic regression. Missing data were adjusted using multiple imputations in statistical modeling. Results: – Among 1279 participants (AP/RAP: n=632, median age 47, 48.9% female; CP: n=647, median age 54, 46.5% female), we observed high cumulative and annualized retention rates, with improved retention when incorporating medical record reviews. In multivariable regression analyses, older age was statistically significantly associated with in-person retention in the AP/RAP group (P=0.0001), while a higher self-reported physical health (assessed with PROMIS Global Health Physical Health T-score) was a key predictor of retention in CP (P=0.034). Conclusions: – Integrating medical records review substantially enhanced retention rates, enabling robust analyses of pancreatitis outcomes and disease progression. Older age and better self-reported physical health were key predictors of retention, highlighting the need for targeted strategies to enhance engagement among younger participants and those with poorer health in long-term studies.
AB - Objectives: – Participant retention is essential in prospective studies to minimize bias and maintain validity. This study aimed to estimate retention rates and identify factors influencing attrition in a multicenter cohort (PROCEED) of US adults with acute/recurrent acute pancreatitis (AP/RAP) and chronic pancreatitis (CP). Methods: – Participants from the PROCEED study with AP/RAP or CP eligible for follow-up within the designated visit window were included. Retention was defined as completing at least one follow-up visit during the observation period. Retention was analyzed by follow-up mode (in-person and/or medical record review) and disease type (AP/RAP and CP). Retention factors were assessed using univariate analyses (Wilcoxon rank-sum for continuous variables, χ2/Fisher's exact for categorical) and multivariable logistic regression. Missing data were adjusted using multiple imputations in statistical modeling. Results: – Among 1279 participants (AP/RAP: n=632, median age 47, 48.9% female; CP: n=647, median age 54, 46.5% female), we observed high cumulative and annualized retention rates, with improved retention when incorporating medical record reviews. In multivariable regression analyses, older age was statistically significantly associated with in-person retention in the AP/RAP group (P=0.0001), while a higher self-reported physical health (assessed with PROMIS Global Health Physical Health T-score) was a key predictor of retention in CP (P=0.034). Conclusions: – Integrating medical records review substantially enhanced retention rates, enabling robust analyses of pancreatitis outcomes and disease progression. Older age and better self-reported physical health were key predictors of retention, highlighting the need for targeted strategies to enhance engagement among younger participants and those with poorer health in long-term studies.
KW - PROCEED
KW - longitudinal cohort studies
KW - pancreatitis
KW - participant retention
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105027117307
U2 - 10.1097/MPA.0000000000002550
DO - 10.1097/MPA.0000000000002550
M3 - Article
C2 - 41081560
AN - SCOPUS:105027117307
SN - 0885-3177
VL - 55
SP - e162-e172
JO - Pancreas
JF - Pancreas
IS - 2
ER -