This conceptual note argues that therapies acting on complex biological systems require dynamic interpretation. It proposes that the clinical meaning of an intervention depends not only on mechanism, dose, or average response, but also on system state, timing, recovery capacity, trajectory, and loss of stability prior to transition. The paper frames treatment effects as state-dependent. The same intervention may stabilize, redirect, fail, or destabilize depending on whether it enters a resilient system, a fragile but reversible system, or a system already consolidating into a pathological attractor. The note connects this principle to dynamic medicine, precision medicine, clinical AI, reset windows, and early-warning signals. It argues that future therapeutic reasoning should move beyond static response logic toward interpretation based on system movement, transition proximity, and windows of therapeutic steerability. This work is conceptual and does not provide clinical guidance or propose a specific therapeutic protocol. Its purpose is to clarify the principle that dynamic therapies require dynamic, state-dependent evaluation.
Anita Domargård (Tue,) studied this question.
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