Number Needed to Treat NNT or NNH Calculator
- Control Event Rate CER
- Experimental Event Rate EER
- Number Needed to Treat NNT or Number Needed to Harm NNH Explanation and Clinical Context
Number Needed to Treat is a measure that reflects how many patients need to receive a specific intervention for one additional patient to benefit compared with control therapy. When the treatment reduces adverse outcomes the absolute risk reduction becomes positive and the result is expressed as NNT. If the treatment increases the probability of adverse outcomes the absolute risk reduction becomes negative and the result is expressed as NNH. This metric helps clinicians translate statistical outcomes into meaningful clinical estimates. Values closer to one indicate stronger clinical effect while very high values suggest limited practical benefit. NNT is commonly used to evaluate medications, acute interventions, preventive therapies, and guideline recommendations. Interpreting NNT should always consider event rate, baseline risk, trial duration, and clinical significance of the outcome. A single NNT value does not capture the full complexity of patient populations or treatment thresholds. A low NNT is clinically attractive for high risk groups but the same therapy may yield a higher NNT in lower risk groups.
Reference:
Laupacis A Sackett DL Roberts RS. An assessment of clinically useful measures of the consequences of treatment. New England Journal of Medicine. 1988 318 1728 1733
McQuay H Moore A. Using NNTs. Bandolier. Oxford University. 1997
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