The clinical process of charting the specific biological effects induced by a therapeutic agent or hormone dosage across time and tissue targets. Mapping focuses on how the body reacts to the substance, distinguishing it from pharmacokinetics which tracks concentration. This ensures that receptor occupancy translates into the desired physiological outcome.
Origin
This methodology is foundational to pharmacology, but its application here is tailored to track nuanced hormonal responses, particularly those involving receptor-mediated actions. Response mapping provides empirical evidence of biological activity at the target site. It validates the clinical relevance of circulating levels.
Mechanism
Mapping involves correlating measured changes in downstream biomarkers—like changes in gene expression markers or tissue-specific functional tests—with the administered dose. For example, tracking the change in bone turnover markers following a specific dose of a steroid hormone illustrates the pharmacodynamic effect. This process refines dosing to match the required biological impact.
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