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Efficacy

 

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Efficacy



 
 
Efficacy is the capacity to produce an effect. It is these conditions that distinguish efficacy from the related concept of effectiveness, which relates to change under real-life conditions.

Context
Healthcare
In a healthcare context, efficacy indicates the capacity for beneficial change (or therapeutic effect
Therapeutic effect

A therapeutic effect is a consequence of a medical treatment, of any kind, the results of which are judged to be desirable and beneficial. This is true whether the result was expected, unexpected, or even an unintended consequence of the treatment....
) of a given intervention (e.g. a medicine
Medicine

Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
, medical device
Medical device

A medical device is an object which is useful for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. Examples of medical devices include medical thermometers, blood glucose monitorings, and X-ray machines....
, surgical procedure, or a public health
Public health

Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals." It is concerned with threats to the overall health of a community based on population health analysis....
 intervention).

If efficacy is established, an intervention is likely to be at least as good as other available interventions, to which it will have been compared.






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Encyclopedia


Efficacy is the capacity to produce an effect. It is these conditions that distinguish efficacy from the related concept of effectiveness, which relates to change under real-life conditions.

Context


Healthcare


In a healthcare context, efficacy indicates the capacity for beneficial change (or therapeutic effect
Therapeutic effect

A therapeutic effect is a consequence of a medical treatment, of any kind, the results of which are judged to be desirable and beneficial. This is true whether the result was expected, unexpected, or even an unintended consequence of the treatment....
) of a given intervention (e.g. a medicine
Medicine

Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
, medical device
Medical device

A medical device is an object which is useful for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. Examples of medical devices include medical thermometers, blood glucose monitorings, and X-ray machines....
, surgical procedure, or a public health
Public health

Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals." It is concerned with threats to the overall health of a community based on population health analysis....
 intervention).

If efficacy is established, an intervention is likely to be at least as good as other available interventions, to which it will have been compared. Comparisons of this type are typically made in 'explanatory' randomized controlled trial
Randomized controlled trial

A randomized controlled trial is a type of scientific experiment most commonly used in testing the efficacy or effectiveness of healthcare Service or health technologies ....
s, whereas 'pragmatic' trials are used to establish the effectiveness of an intervention.

The concept of 'self-efficacy' is an important one in the self-management of chronic
Chronic (medicine)

In medicine, a chronic disease is a disease that is long-lasting or recurrent. The term chronic describes the Course of the disease, or its rate of onset and development....
 diseases because doctors and patients often do not follow best practice
Best practice

Best practice is an idea that asserts that there is a wikt:technique, method, process, activity, incentive or reward that is more effective at delivering a particular outcome than any other technique, method, process, etc....
 in using a treatment. For instance, a patient using combined oral contraceptive pills to prevent pregnancy may sometimes forget to take a pill at the prescribed time; thus, while the perfect-use failure rate for this form of contraception in the first year of use is just 0.3%, the typical-use failure rate is 8%.

Pharmacology

Doseresponse000
In pharmacology, intrinsic activity or efficacy refers to the ability of a drug-receptor complex to produce a functional response. This must be distinguished from the affinity
Dissociation constant

In chemistry and biochemistry, a dissociation constant is a specific type of equilibrium constant that measures the propensity of a larger object to separate reversibly into smaller components, as...
, which is a measure of the ability of the drug to bind to its molecular target, and the EC50
EC50

The term half maximal effective concentration refers to the concentration of a drug or antibody which induces a response halfway between the baseline and maximum....
, which is a measure of the potency of the drug and which is proportional to both efficacy and affinity. This use of the word "efficacy" was introduced by Stephenson (1956) to describe the way in which agonists vary in the response they produce, even when they occupy the same number of receptors. High efficacy agonists can produce the maximal response of the receptor system while occupying a relatively low proportion of the receptors in that system. Agonists of lower efficacy are not as efficient at producing a response from the drug-bound receptor, by stabilising the active form of the drug-bound receptor. Therefore, they may not be able to produce the same maximal response, even when they occupy the entire receptor population, as the efficiency of transformation of the inactive form of the drug-receptor complex to the active drug-receptor complex may not be high enough to evoke a maximal response. Since the observed response may be less than maximal in systems with no spare receptor reserve, some low efficacy agonists are referred to as partial agonists. However, it is worth bearing in mind that even partial agonists may appear full agonists in a different system/experimental setup, as when the number of receptors increases, there may be enough drug-receptor complexes for a maximum response to be produced, even with individually low efficacy of transducing the response.

  • agonist
    Agonist

    An agonist is a term used to describe a type of Ligand or drug that binds and alters the activity of a Receptor . The ability to alter the activity of a receptor, also known as the agonist's efficacy is a property that distinguishes it from receptor antagonist, a type of receptor ligand which also binds a receptor but which does not alter t...
    : affinity and high efficacy
  • antagonist
    Receptor antagonist

    A receptor antagonist is a type of receptor ligand or drug that does not provoke a biological response itself upon binding to a Receptor , but blocks or dampens agonist-mediated responses....
     : affinity without efficacy
  • partial agonist: affinity and low efficacy, in a system with a small number of receptors


Lighting

In lighting design, "efficacy" refers to the amount of light (luminous flux
Luminous flux

In photometry , luminous flux or luminous power is the measure of the perceived power of light. It differs from radiant flux, the measure of the total power of light emitted, in that luminous flux is adjusted to reflect the varying sensitivity of the human eye to different wavelengths of light....
) produced by a lamp (a light bulb or other light source), usually measured in lumens, as a ratio of the amount of energy consumed to produce it, usually measured in watts. This is not to be confused with efficiency which is always a dimensionless ratio of output divided by input which for lighting relates to the watts of visible energy as a ratio of the energy consumed in watts. The visible energy can be approximated by the area under the Planck curve between 300 nm and 700 nm for a blackbody at the temperature of the filament as a ratio of the total energy under the blackbody curve. Efficiency values for light from a heat source are typically less than two percent.

Difference amplifiers


The efficacy of a differential amplifier is measured by the degree of its rejection of common-mode signals in preference to differential signals. Referred to as common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR); typically specified in decibels.

See also

  • Placebo (origins of technical term)
  • Vaccine efficacy
    Vaccine efficacy

    Vaccine efficacy is defined as the reduction in the incidence of a disease among people who have received a vaccine compared to the incidence in unvaccinated people....
  • Efficiency
    Efficiency

    Efficiency may refer to:...
  • Figure of merit
    Figure of merit

    A figure of merit is a quantity used to characterize the performance of a device, system or method, relative to its alternatives. In engineering, figures of merit are often defined for particular materials or devices in order to determine their relative utility for an application....
  • Self-efficacy
    Self-efficacy

    Self-efficacy is the belief that one is capable of performing in a certain manner to attain certain goals. It is a belief that one has the capabilities to execute the courses of actions required to manage prospective situations....
  • Effectiveness
    Effectiveness

    Effectiveness means the capability of producing an effect.In Medicine, effectiveness relates to how well a treatment works in practice, as opposed to efficacy, which measures how well it works in clinical trials or laboratory studies....