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Loewe additivity

In toxicodynamics and pharmacodynamics, Loewe additivity (or dose additivity) is one of several common reference models used for measuring the effects of drug combinations.[1][2][3]

Definition edit

Let   and   be doses of compounds 1 and 2 producing in combination an effect  . We denote by   and   the doses of compounds 1 and 2 required to produce effect   alone (assuming this conditions uniquely define them, i.e. that the individual dose-response functions are bijective).   quantifies the potency of compound 1 relatively to that of compound 2.

  can be interpreted as the dose   of compound 2 converted into the corresponding dose of compound 1 after accounting for difference in potency.

Loewe additivity is defined as the situation where   or  .

Geometrically, Loewe additivity is the situation where isoboles are segments joining the points   and   in the domain  .

If we denote by  ,   and   the dose-response functions of compound 1, compound 2 and of the mixture respectively, then dose additivity holds when

 

Testing edit

The Loewe additivity equation provides a prediction of the dose combination eliciting a given effect. Departure from Loewe additivity can be assessed informally by comparing this prediction to observations. This approach is known in toxicology as the model deviation ratio (MDR).[4]

This approach can be rooted in a more formal statistical method with the derivation of approximate p-values with Monte Carlo simulation, as implemented in the R package MDR.[5][clarification needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Greco, W.R.; Bravo, G.; Parsons, J. (1995). "The Search for Synergy: A Critical Review from a Response Surface Perspective". Pharmacol. Rev. 47 (2): 331–385. PMID 7568331.
  2. ^ Loewe, S. (1926). "Effect of combinations: mathematical basis of problem". Arch. Exp. Pathol. Pharmakol. 114: 313–326. doi:10.1007/BF01952257. S2CID 19783017.
  3. ^ Tang, J.; Wennerberg, J.K.; Aittokallio, T. (2015). "What Is Synergy? The Saariselkä Agreement Revisited". Frontiers in Pharmacology. 6: 181. doi:10.3389/fphar.2015.00181. PMC 4555011. PMID 26388771.
  4. ^ Belden, J. B.; Gilliom, R.; Lydy, M.J. (2007). "How well can we predict the toxicity of pesticide mixtures to aquatic life?". Integr. Environ. Assess. Manag. 3 (3): 364–72. doi:10.1002/ieam.5630030307. PMID 17695109. S2CID 16438339.
  5. ^ "Github development repository for the R package MDR". GitHub. 2020-01-20.


loewe, additivity, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2019, learn, when, remove. This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message In toxicodynamics and pharmacodynamics Loewe additivity or dose additivity is one of several common reference models used for measuring the effects of drug combinations 1 2 3 Definition editLet d 1 displaystyle d 1 nbsp and d 2 displaystyle d 2 nbsp be doses of compounds 1 and 2 producing in combination an effect e displaystyle e nbsp We denote by D e 1 displaystyle D e1 nbsp and D e 2 displaystyle D e2 nbsp the doses of compounds 1 and 2 required to produce effect e displaystyle e nbsp alone assuming this conditions uniquely define them i e that the individual dose response functions are bijective D e 1 D e 2 displaystyle D e1 D e2 nbsp quantifies the potency of compound 1 relatively to that of compound 2 d 2 D e 1 D e 2 displaystyle d 2 D e1 D e2 nbsp can be interpreted as the dose d 2 displaystyle d 2 nbsp of compound 2 converted into the corresponding dose of compound 1 after accounting for difference in potency Loewe additivity is defined as the situation where d 1 d 2 D e 1 D e 2 D e 1 displaystyle d 1 d 2 D e1 D e2 D e1 nbsp or d 1 D e 1 d 2 D e 2 1 displaystyle d 1 D e1 d 2 D e2 1 nbsp Geometrically Loewe additivity is the situation where isoboles are segments joining the points D e 1 0 displaystyle D e1 0 nbsp and 0 D e 2 displaystyle 0 D e2 nbsp in the domain d 1 d 2 displaystyle d 1 d 2 nbsp If we denote by f 1 d 1 displaystyle f 1 d 1 nbsp f 2 d 2 displaystyle f 2 d 2 nbsp and f 12 d 1 d 2 displaystyle f 12 d 1 d 2 nbsp the dose response functions of compound 1 compound 2 and of the mixture respectively then dose additivity holds when d 1 f 1 1 f 12 d 1 d 2 d 2 f 2 1 f 12 d 1 d 2 1 displaystyle frac d 1 f 1 1 f 12 d 1 d 2 frac d 2 f 2 1 f 12 d 1 d 2 1 nbsp Testing editThe Loewe additivity equation provides a prediction of the dose combination eliciting a given effect Departure from Loewe additivity can be assessed informally by comparing this prediction to observations This approach is known in toxicology as the model deviation ratio MDR 4 This approach can be rooted in a more formal statistical method with the derivation of approximate p values with Monte Carlo simulation as implemented in the R package MDR 5 clarification needed References edit Greco W R Bravo G Parsons J 1995 The Search for Synergy A Critical Review from a Response Surface Perspective Pharmacol Rev 47 2 331 385 PMID 7568331 Loewe S 1926 Effect of combinations mathematical basis of problem Arch Exp Pathol Pharmakol 114 313 326 doi 10 1007 BF01952257 S2CID 19783017 Tang J Wennerberg J K Aittokallio T 2015 What Is Synergy The Saariselka Agreement Revisited Frontiers in Pharmacology 6 181 doi 10 3389 fphar 2015 00181 PMC 4555011 PMID 26388771 Belden J B Gilliom R Lydy M J 2007 How well can we predict the toxicity of pesticide mixtures to aquatic life Integr Environ Assess Manag 3 3 364 72 doi 10 1002 ieam 5630030307 PMID 17695109 S2CID 16438339 Github development repository for the R package MDR GitHub 2020 01 20 nbsp This pharmacology related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Loewe additivity amp oldid 1182786239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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