Dose-Response Relationships and Therapeutic Window
A dose-response relationship describes how the magnitude of a drug's effect changes as the dose or concentration changes. The therapeutic window (or therapeutic range) is the band of exposure that lies above the level needed for a desired effect but below the level at which unacceptable toxicity appears; its width, summarised by the therapeutic index, is a central determinant of how a drug's effects are characterised.
Definition
A dose-response relationship is the quantitative relation between the dose (or concentration) of a drug and the magnitude or probability of its effect; the therapeutic window is the range of exposure between the minimum effective concentration and the concentration at which toxicity becomes unacceptable.
Scope
This topic covers graded and quantal dose-response curves, the parameters that summarise them (such as the half-maximal effective dose and the maximal effect), the concepts of therapeutic window, therapeutic range, and therapeutic index, and the meaning of margin of safety. It is a reference and educational entry and does not give dosing instructions.
Core questions
- How does the magnitude of effect change with dose, and why is the curve typically sigmoidal on a log scale?
- What is the difference between a graded and a quantal dose-response curve?
- How are the half-maximal effective dose and the maximal effect read from a dose-response curve?
- What does the therapeutic index convey about a drug's margin of safety?
Key concepts
- Graded dose-response curve
- Quantal dose-response curve
- Half-maximal effective dose (ED50 / EC50)
- Maximal effect (Emax)
- Therapeutic window and therapeutic range
- Therapeutic index
- Margin of safety
- Minimum effective and minimum toxic concentration
Key theories
- Graded dose-response (Hill) relationship
- The response to increasing concentration is commonly modelled as a saturable, sigmoidal function of log concentration (a Hill or logistic form), from which potency (the concentration giving half-maximal effect) and maximal effect are estimated; operational models extend this to relate the observed curve to underlying binding and coupling.
Mechanisms
Graded dose-response curves plot the size of a continuous effect against dose or concentration and are typically sigmoidal when concentration is expressed on a logarithmic scale, reaching a plateau at the maximal effect. Quantal curves instead plot the proportion of a population showing an all-or-none response, and from them median effective and median toxic (or lethal, in non-clinical studies) doses can be derived. The therapeutic index is conventionally expressed as the ratio of a toxic-effect dose to an effective-effect dose, giving a summary of how far apart the effective and toxic ranges lie. A drug with a narrow therapeutic window has effective and toxic exposures close together, which is why its effects are characterised and monitored more closely. Standardised definitions of these dose-response parameters are maintained by international pharmacology nomenclature.
Clinical relevance
Dose-response and therapeutic-window concepts explain why effects of a medicine appear, plateau, or give way to toxicity as exposure changes, and they underpin the rationale for therapeutic monitoring of drugs with narrow margins. This entry is conceptual and educational; it does not provide dosing, titration, or individualized treatment advice.
Evidence & guidelines
Quantitative terms used to describe dose-response relationships - such as EC50, Emax, and related symbols - are standardised by the IUPHAR Committee on Receptor Nomenclature and Drug Classification, which provides the agreed framework for reporting potency and efficacy from dose-response data.
History
The sigmoidal description of concentration and response traces to Hill's early twentieth-century equation for ligand binding, later adapted to drug effects, and to Clark's quantitative pharmacology. The framing of effective versus toxic ranges as a therapeutic index, and the operational modelling of dose-response curves by Black and Leff, refined the field's ability to summarise drug action with a small number of interpretable parameters.
Key figures
- Archibald Vivian Hill
- Alfred Joseph Clark
- James Black
- Terry Kenakin
Related topics
Seminal works
- black-leff-1983
- neubig-2003
Frequently asked questions
- What is the therapeutic index?
- The therapeutic index is a summary ratio comparing a dose or concentration that produces toxicity with one that produces the desired effect; a larger value indicates a wider separation between effective and toxic exposures.
- Why are dose-response curves usually drawn against the logarithm of concentration?
- Because drug effects span a wide range of concentrations and the underlying binding is saturable, plotting effect against log concentration produces an approximately symmetrical sigmoidal curve from which potency and maximal effect are easily read.