\title{Generate Antibiogram: Traditional, Combined, Syndromic, or Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination (WISCA)}
\source{
\itemize{
\item Klinker KP \emph{et al.} (2021). \strong{Antimicrobial stewardship and antibiograms: importance of moving beyond traditional antibiograms}. \emph{Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease}, May 5;8:20499361211011373; \doi{10.1177/20499361211011373}
\item Barbieri E \emph{et al.} (2021). \strong{Development of a Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination Antibiogram (WISCA) to guide the choice of the empiric antibiotic treatment for urinary tract infection in paediatric patients: a Bayesian approach} \emph{Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control} May 1;10(1):74; \doi{10.1186/s13756-021-00939-2}
\item \strong{M39 Analysis and Presentation of Cumulative Antimicrobial Susceptibility Test Data, 5th Edition}, 2022, \emph{Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)}. \url{https://clsi.org/standards/products/microbiology/documents/m39/}.
\item{x}{a \link{data.frame} containing at least a column with microorganisms and columns with antibiotic results (class 'sir', see \code{\link[=as.sir]{as.sir()}})}
\item{antibiotics}{vector of column names, or (any combinations of) \link[=antibiotic_class_selectors]{antibiotic selectors} such as \code{\link[=aminoglycosides]{aminoglycosides()}} or \code{\link[=carbapenems]{carbapenems()}}. For combination antibiograms, this can also be column names separated with \code{"+"}, such as "TZP+TOB" given that the data set contains columns "TZP" and "TOB". See \emph{Examples}.}
\item{mo_transform}{a character to transform microorganism input - must be "name", "shortname", "gramstain", or one of the column names of the \link{microorganisms} data set: "mo", "fullname", "status", "kingdom", "phylum", "class", "order", "family", "genus", "species", "subspecies", "rank", "ref", "source", "lpsn", "lpsn_parent", "lpsn_renamed_to", "gbif", "gbif_parent", "gbif_renamed_to", "prevalence", or "snomed". Can also be \code{NULL} to not transform the input.}
\item{ab_transform}{a character to transform antibiotic input - must be one of the column names of the \link{antibiotics} data set: "ab", "cid", "name", "group", "atc", "atc_group1", "atc_group2", "abbreviations", "synonyms", "oral_ddd", "oral_units", "iv_ddd", "iv_units", or "loinc". Can also be \code{NULL} to not transform the input.}
\item{syndromic_group}{a column name of \code{x}, or values calculated to split rows of \code{x}, e.g. by using \code{\link[=ifelse]{ifelse()}} or \code{\link[dplyr:case_when]{case_when()}}. See \emph{Examples}.}
\item{add_total_n}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether total available numbers per pathogen should be added to the table (default is \code{TRUE}). This will add the lowest and highest number of available isolate per antibiotic (e.g, if for \emph{E. coli} 200 isolates are available for ciprofloxacin and 150 for amoxicillin, the returned number will be "150-200").}
\item{only_all_tested}{(for combination antibiograms): a \link{logical} to indicate that isolates must be tested for all antibiotics, see \emph{Details}}
\item{digits}{number of digits to use for rounding}
\item{col_mo}{column name of the names or codes of the microorganisms (see \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}) - the default is the first column of class \code{\link{mo}}. Values will be coerced using \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}.}
\item{language}{language to translate text, which defaults to the system language (see \code{\link[=get_AMR_locale]{get_AMR_locale()}})}
\item{minimum}{the minimum allowed number of available (tested) isolates. Any isolate count lower than \code{minimum} will return \code{NA} with a warning. The default number of \code{30} isolates is advised by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) as best practice, see \emph{Source}.}
\item{combine_SI}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether all susceptibility should be determined by results of either S or I, instead of only S (default is \code{TRUE})}
\item{as_kable}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether the printing should be done using \code{\link[knitr:kable]{knitr::kable()}} (which is the default in non-interactive sessions)}
\item{italicise}{(only when \code{as_kable = TRUE}) a \link{logical} to indicate whether the microorganism names in the output table should be made italic, using \code{\link[=italicise_taxonomy]{italicise_taxonomy()}}. This only works when the output format is markdown, such as in HTML output.}
\item{na}{(only when \code{as_kable = TRUE}) character to use for showing \code{NA} values}
Generate an antibiogram, and communicate the results in plots or tables. These functions follow the logic of Klinker \emph{et al.} and Barbieri \emph{et al.} (see \emph{Source}), and allow reporting in e.g. R Markdown and Quarto as well.
This function returns a table with values between 0 and 100 for \emph{susceptibility}, not resistance.
\strong{Remember that you should filter your data to let it contain only first isolates!} This is needed to exclude duplicates and to reduce selection bias. Use \code{\link[=first_isolate]{first_isolate()}} to determine them in your data set with one of the four available algorithms.
There are four antibiogram types, as proposed by Klinker \emph{et al.} (2021, \doi{10.1177/20499361211011373}), and they are all supported by \code{\link[=antibiogram]{antibiogram()}}:
\enumerate{
\item \strong{Traditional Antibiogram}
Case example: Susceptibility of \emph{Pseudomonas aeruginosa} to piperacillin/tazobactam (TZP)
Case example: Susceptibility of \emph{Pseudomonas aeruginosa} to TZP among respiratory specimens (obtained among ICU patients only) for male patients age >=65 years with heart failure
All types of antibiograms can be generated with the functions as described on this page, and can be plotted (using \code{\link[ggplot2:autoplot]{ggplot2::autoplot()}} or base \R \code{\link[=plot]{plot()}}/\code{\link[=barplot]{barplot()}}) or printed into R Markdown / Quarto formats for reports using \code{print()}. Use functions from specific 'table reporting' packages to transform the output of \code{\link[=antibiogram]{antibiogram()}} to your needs, e.g. \code{flextable::as_flextable()} or \code{gt::gt()}.
Note that for combination antibiograms, it is important to realise that susceptibility can be calculated in two ways, which can be set with the \code{only_all_tested} argument (default is \code{FALSE}). See this example for two antibiotics, Drug A and Drug B, about how \code{\link[=antibiogram]{antibiogram()}} works to calculate the \%SI:
Printing the antibiogram in non-interactive sessions will be done by \code{\link[knitr:kable]{knitr::kable()}}, with support for \link[knitr:kable]{all their implemented formats}, such as "markdown". The knitr format will be automatically determined if printed inside a knitr document (LaTeX, HTML, etc.).
}
\examples{
# example_isolates is a data set available in the AMR package.