@@ -97,8 +97,11 @@ data sets to formats for use in R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache
Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated text files that
are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program,
such as laboratory information systems.
-
On this page, we explain how to download them and how the structure
-of the data sets look like.
+
+
If you are working in Python, be sure to use our AMR
+for Python package. It allows all relevant AMR data sets to be
+natively available in Python.
+
microorganisms: Full Microbial Taxonomy
@@ -115,28 +118,29 @@ column names: mo, fullname, status, kingdomThis data set is in R available as microorganisms, after
you load the AMR package.
It was last updated on 26 March 2025 16:19:17 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
NOTE: The exported files for SPSS and Stata contain only the
@@ -146,35 +150,7 @@ structures and compression techniques are very inefficient. Advice? Use
R instead. It’s free and much better in many ways.
The tab-separated text file and Microsoft Excel workbook both contain
all SNOMED codes as comma separated values.
-
-
Source
-
-
This data set contains the full microbial taxonomy of six kingdoms
-from the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN),
-MycoBank, and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF):
-
-
Parte, AC et al. (2020). List of Prokaryotic names
-with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) moves to the DSMZ.
-International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 70,
-5607-5612; . Accessed from https://lpsn.dsmz.de on June 24th, 2024.
-
Vincent, R et al (2013). MycoBank gearing up for
-new horizons. IMA Fungus, 4(2), 371-9; . Accessed from https://www.mycobank.org
-on June 24th, 2024.
-
GBIF Secretariat (2023). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset .
-Accessed from https://www.gbif.org on June 24th, 2024.
-
Reimer, LC et al. (2022). BacDive in 2022:
-the knowledge base for standardized bacterial and archaeal
-data. Nucleic Acids Res., 50(D1):D741-D74; . Accessed from https://bacdive.dsmz.de
-on July 16th, 2024.
-
Public Health Information Network Vocabulary Access and Distribution
-System (PHIN VADS). US Edition of SNOMED CT from 1 September 2020. Value
-Set Name ‘Microorganism’, OID 2.16.840.1.114222.4.11.1009 (v12). URL: https://www.cdc.gov/phin/php/phinvads/
-
-
-
-
-
Example content
-
+
Example content
Included (sub)species per taxonomic kingdom:
@@ -208,7 +184,7 @@ Set Name ‘Microorganism’, OID 2.16.840.1.114222.4.11.1009 (v12). URL:
-
Example rows when filtering on genus Escherichia:
+
First 6 rows when filtering on genus Escherichia:
@@ -438,7 +414,6 @@ Set Name ‘Microorganism’, OID 2.16.840.1.114222.4.11.1009 (v12). URL:
-
antimicrobials: Antibiotic and Antifungal Drugs
@@ -451,56 +426,35 @@ column names: ab, cid, name, group, a
This data set is in R available as antimicrobials, after
you load the AMR package.
It was last updated on 19 March 2025 15:05:24 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
The tab-separated text, Microsoft Excel, SPSS, and Stata files all
contain the ATC codes, common abbreviations, trade names and LOINC codes
as comma separated values.
-
-
Source
-
-
This data set contains all EARS-Net and ATC codes gathered from WHO
-and WHONET, and all compound IDs from PubChem. It also contains all
-brand names (synonyms) as found on PubChem and Defined Daily Doses
-(DDDs) for oral and parenteral administration.
A data set with 120 rows and 11 columns, containing the following
-column names: av, name, atc, cid,
-atc_group, synonyms, oral_ddd,
-oral_units, iv_ddd, iv_units, and
-loinc.
-
This data set is in R available as antivirals, after you
-load the AMR package.
-
It was last updated on 20 October 2023 12:51:48 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
The tab-separated text, Microsoft Excel, SPSS, and Stata files all
-contain the trade names and LOINC codes as comma separated values.
-
-
Source
-
-
This data set contains all ATC codes gathered from WHO and all
-compound IDs from PubChem. It also contains all brand names (synonyms)
-as found on PubChem and Defined Daily Doses (DDDs) for oral and
-parenteral administration.
Nucleoside and nucleotide reverse transcriptase
-inhibitors
-
abacavir sulfate, avacavir, ziagen
-
0.6
-
g
-
-
-
29113-8, 30273-7, 30287-7, …
-
-
-
ACI
-
Aciclovir
-
J05AB01
-
135398513
-
Nucleosides and nucleotides excl. reverse
-transcriptase inhibitors
-
acicloftal, aciclovier, aciclovirum, …
-
4.0
-
g
-
4
-
g
-
-
-
-
ADD
-
Adefovir dipivoxil
-
J05AF08
-
60871
-
Nucleoside and nucleotide reverse transcriptase
-inhibitors
-
adefovir di, adefovir di ester, adefovir dipivoxyl,
-…
-
10.0
-
mg
-
-
-
-
-
-
AME
-
Amenamevir
-
J05AX26
-
11397521
-
Other antivirals
-
amenalief
-
0.4
-
g
-
-
-
-
-
-
AMP
-
Amprenavir
-
J05AE05
-
65016
-
Protease inhibitors
-
agenerase, carbamate, prozei
-
1.2
-
g
-
-
-
29114-6, 30296-8, 30297-6, …
-
-
-
ASU
-
Asunaprevir
-
J05AP06
-
16076883
-
Antivirals for treatment of HCV infections
-
sunvepra, sunvepratrade
-
0.2
-
g
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
clinical_breakpoints: Interpretation from MIC values
@@ -824,60 +603,32 @@ column names: guideline, type, host, methodThis data set is in R available as clinical_breakpoints,
after you load the AMR package.
It was last updated on 13 March 2025 14:38:39 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
This data set contains interpretation rules for MIC values and disk
-diffusion diameters. Included guidelines are CLSI (2011-2024) and EUCAST
-(2011-2024).
-
Clinical breakpoints in this package were validated through and
-imported from WHONET, a free desktop
-Windows application developed and supported by the WHO Collaborating
-Centre for Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance. More can be read on
-their website. The developers of WHONET
-and this AMR package have been in contact about sharing
-their work. We highly appreciate their development on the WHONET
-software.
-
The CEO of CLSI and the chairman of EUCAST have endorsed the work and
-public use of this AMR package (and consequently the use of
-their breakpoints) in June 2023, when future development of distributing
-clinical breakpoints was discussed in a meeting between CLSI, EUCAST,
-the WHO, and developers of WHONET and the AMR package.
-
NOTE: this AMR package (and the WHONET
-software as well) contains internal methods to apply the guidelines,
-which is rather complex. For example, some breakpoints must be applied
-on certain species groups (which are in case of this package available
-through the microorganisms.groups data set). It is
-important that this is considered when using the breakpoints for own
-use.
-
-
-
Example content
-
+
Example content
@@ -1027,52 +778,133 @@ use.
+
+
+microorganisms.groups: Species Groups and
+Microbiological Complexes
+
+
A data set with 534 rows and 4 columns, containing the following
+column names: mo_group, mo, mo_group_name, and
+mo_name.
+
This data set is in R available as
+microorganisms.groups, after you load the AMR
+package.
+
It was last updated on 26 March 2025 16:19:17 UTC. Find more info
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
example_isolates: Example Data for Practice
@@ -1471,16 +1291,9 @@ column names: date, patient, age, gender,
This data set is in R available as example_isolates,
after you load the AMR package.
It was last updated on 15 June 2024 13:33:49 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
-
-
Source
-
-
This data set contains randomised fictitious data, but reflects
-reality and can be used to practise AMR data analysis.
-
-
-
Example content
-
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
+
Example content
@@ -1870,7 +1683,6 @@ reality and can be used to practise AMR data analysis.
-
example_isolates_unclean: Example Data for
@@ -1884,16 +1696,9 @@ column names: patient_id, hospital, date,
example_isolates_unclean, after you load the
AMR package.
It was last updated on 27 August 2022 18:49:37 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
-
-
Source
-
-
This data set contains randomised fictitious data, but reflects
-reality and can be used to practise AMR data analysis.
-
-
-
Example content
-
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
+
Example content
@@ -1979,106 +1784,6 @@ reality and can be used to practise AMR data analysis.
-
-
-
-microorganisms.groups: Species Groups and
-Microbiological Complexes
-
-
A data set with 534 rows and 4 columns, containing the following
-column names: mo_group, mo, mo_group_name, and
-mo_name.
-
This data set is in R available as
-microorganisms.groups, after you load the AMR
-package.
-
It was last updated on 26 March 2025 16:19:17 UTC. Find more info
-about the structure of this data set here.
This data set contains commonly used codes for microorganisms, from
-laboratory systems and WHONET.
-
-
-
Example content
-
+
Example content
code
@@ -2154,6 +1852,158 @@ laboratory systems and WHONET
+
+
+antivirals: Antiviral Drugs
+
+
A data set with 120 rows and 11 columns, containing the following
+column names: av, name, atc, cid,
+atc_group, synonyms, oral_ddd,
+oral_units, iv_ddd, iv_units, and
+loinc.
+
This data set is in R available as antivirals, after you
+load the AMR package.
+
It was last updated on 20 October 2023 12:51:48 UTC. Find more info
+about the contents, (scientific) source, and structure of this data
+set here.
The tab-separated text, Microsoft Excel, SPSS, and Stata files all
+contain the trade names and LOINC codes as comma separated values.
+
Example content
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
av
+
name
+
atc
+
cid
+
atc_group
+
synonyms
+
oral_ddd
+
oral_units
+
iv_ddd
+
iv_units
+
loinc
+
+
+
+
ABA
+
Abacavir
+
J05AF06
+
441300
+
Nucleoside and nucleotide reverse transcriptase
+inhibitors
+
abacavir sulfate, avacavir, ziagen
+
0.6
+
g
+
+
+
29113-8, 30273-7, 30287-7, …
+
+
+
ACI
+
Aciclovir
+
J05AB01
+
135398513
+
Nucleosides and nucleotides excl. reverse
+transcriptase inhibitors
+
acicloftal, aciclovier, aciclovirum, …
+
4.0
+
g
+
4
+
g
+
+
+
+
ADD
+
Adefovir dipivoxil
+
J05AF08
+
60871
+
Nucleoside and nucleotide reverse transcriptase
+inhibitors
+
adefovir di, adefovir di ester, adefovir dipivoxyl,
+…
+
10.0
+
mg
+
+
+
+
+
+
AME
+
Amenamevir
+
J05AX26
+
11397521
+
Other antivirals
+
amenalief
+
0.4
+
g
+
+
+
+
+
+
AMP
+
Amprenavir
+
J05AE05
+
65016
+
Protease inhibitors
+
agenerase, carbamate, prozei
+
1.2
+
g
+
+
+
29114-6, 30296-8, 30297-6, …
+
+
+
ASU
+
Asunaprevir
+
J05AP06
+
16076883
+
Antivirals for treatment of HCV infections
+
sunvepra, sunvepratrade
+
0.2
+
g
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/articles/index.html b/articles/index.html
index a9a5e5fc8..a62251fc9 100644
--- a/articles/index.html
+++ b/articles/index.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/articles/resistance_predict.html b/articles/resistance_predict.html
index 4aad57569..36ec67639 100644
--- a/articles/resistance_predict.html
+++ b/articles/resistance_predict.html
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/articles/welcome_to_AMR.html b/articles/welcome_to_AMR.html
index 121256550..b03cc2371 100644
--- a/articles/welcome_to_AMR.html
+++ b/articles/welcome_to_AMR.html
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/authors.html b/authors.html
index 03406da9d..98373408b 100644
--- a/authors.html
+++ b/authors.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/extra.js b/extra.js
index 84ff8b4b2..f70a7b71c 100644
--- a/extra.js
+++ b/extra.js
@@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ $(document).ready(function() {
x = x.replace("Javier", "Prof. Javier");
x = x.replace("Jonas", "Dr. Jonas");
x = x.replace("Judith", "Dr. Judith");
- x = x.replace("Katryn", "Prof. Katryn");
+ x = x.replace("Kathryn", "Prof. Kathryn");
x = x.replace("Larisse", "Dr. Larisse");
x = x.replace("Matthijs", "Dr. Matthijs");
x = x.replace("Natacha", "Dr. Natacha");
diff --git a/index.html b/index.html
index 057db851c..f7abfd91c 100644
--- a/index.html
+++ b/index.html
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/news/index.html b/news/index.html
index 7c010a063..196029c3b 100644
--- a/news/index.html
+++ b/news/index.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -50,19 +50,19 @@
-
AMR 2.1.1.9227
+
AMR 2.1.1.9228
(this beta version will eventually become v3.0. We’re happy to reach a new major milestone soon, which will be all about the new One Health support! Install this beta using the instructions here.)
-
A New Milestone: AMR v3.0 with One Health Support (= Human + Veterinary + Environmental)
+
A New Milestone: AMR v3.0 with One Health Support (= Human + Veterinary + Environmental)
This package now supports not only tools for AMR data analysis in clinical settings, but also for veterinary and environmental microbiology. This was made possible through a collaboration with the University of Prince Edward Island’s Atlantic Veterinary College, Canada. To celebrate this great improvement of the package, we also updated the package logo to reflect this change.
-
Breaking
+
Breaking
Dataset antibiotics has been renamed to antimicrobials as the data set contains more than just antibiotics. Using antibiotics will still work, but now returns a warning.
Removed all functions and references that used the deprecated rsi class, which were all replaced with their sir equivalents over two years ago.
-
New
+
New
One Health implementation
Function as.sir() now has extensive support for veterinary breakpoints from CLSI. Use breakpoint_type = "animal" and set the host argument to a variable that contains animal species names.
@@ -116,7 +116,7 @@
-
Changed
+
Changed
SIR interpretation
It is now possible to use column names for argument ab, mo, and uti: as.sir(..., ab = "column1", mo = "column2", uti = "column3"). This greatly improves the flexibility for users.
Users can now set their own criteria (using regular expressions) as to what should be considered S, I, R, SDD, and NI.
@@ -192,7 +192,7 @@
Added console colours support of sir class for Positron
-
Other
+
Other
Added Dr. Larisse Bolton and Aislinn Cook as contributors for their fantastic implementation of WISCA in a mathematically solid way
Added Matthew Saab, Dr. Jordan Stull, and Prof. Javier Sanchez as contributors for their tremendous input on veterinary breakpoints and interpretations
Added Prof. Kat Holt, Dr. Jane Hawkey, and Dr. Natacha Couto as contributors for their many suggestions, ideas and bugfixes
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@
Stopped support for SAS (.xpt) files, since their file structure and extremely inefficient and requires more disk space than GitHub allows in a single commit.
-
Older Versions
+
Older Versions
This changelog only contains changes from AMR v3.0 (March 2025) and later.
diff --git a/pkgdown.yml b/pkgdown.yml
index 5f96cb925..4dd4f3db8 100644
--- a/pkgdown.yml
+++ b/pkgdown.yml
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ articles:
resistance_predict: resistance_predict.html
welcome_to_AMR: welcome_to_AMR.html
WHONET: WHONET.html
-last_built: 2025-03-27T14:42Z
+last_built: 2025-03-28T10:23Z
urls:
reference: https://msberends.github.io/AMR/reference
article: https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles
diff --git a/reference/AMR-deprecated.html b/reference/AMR-deprecated.html
index 6714e8454..974e013c3 100644
--- a/reference/AMR-deprecated.html
+++ b/reference/AMR-deprecated.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/AMR-options.html b/reference/AMR-options.html
index c6d220468..94f4f06c7 100644
--- a/reference/AMR-options.html
+++ b/reference/AMR-options.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/AMR.html b/reference/AMR.html
index 395bbb73a..7c641350f 100644
--- a/reference/AMR.html
+++ b/reference/AMR.html
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ The AMR package is available in English, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish,
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -96,10 +96,12 @@ The AMR package is available in English, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish,
-
Reference Data Publicly Available
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
AMP_ND10:CIP_EE 28 different antimicrobials. You can lookup the abbreviations in the antimicrobials data set, or use e.g. ab_name("AMP") to get the official name immediately. Before analysis, you should transform this to a valid antimicrobial class, using as.sir().
-
Details
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
Properties that are based on an ATC code are only available when an ATC is available. These properties are: atc_group1, atc_group2, oral_ddd, oral_units, iv_ddd and iv_units.
-
Synonyms (i.e. trade names) were derived from the PubChem Compound ID (column cid) and consequently only available where a CID is available.
-
Direct download
+
Synonyms (i.e. trade names) were derived from the PubChem Compound ID (column cid) and consequently only available where a CID is available.
+
+
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
Like all data sets in this package, these data sets are publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
-
-
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All matches are sorted descending on their matching score and for all user input values, the top match will be returned. This will lead to the effect that e.g., "E. coli" will return the microbial ID of Escherichia coli (\(m = 0.688\), a highly prevalent microorganism found in humans) and not Entamoeba coli (\(m = 0.381\), a less prevalent microorganism in humans), although the latter would alphabetically come first.
-
Reference Data Publicly Available
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
diff --git a/reference/as.sir.html b/reference/as.sir.html
index 5f2a95e95..5b51485ac 100644
--- a/reference/as.sir.html
+++ b/reference/as.sir.html
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ All breakpoints used for interpretation are available in our clinical_breakpoint
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -320,10 +320,12 @@ A microorganism is categorised as "Resistant" when there is a high likelihood of
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
diff --git a/reference/availability.html b/reference/availability.html
index 2ec706309..0b9aa2f05 100644
--- a/reference/availability.html
+++ b/reference/availability.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/bug_drug_combinations.html b/reference/bug_drug_combinations.html
index 2cb63f7ae..6f0ccdb7f 100644
--- a/reference/bug_drug_combinations.html
+++ b/reference/bug_drug_combinations.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/clinical_breakpoints.html b/reference/clinical_breakpoints.html
index e8ae691f3..a74b74c2a 100644
--- a/reference/clinical_breakpoints.html
+++ b/reference/clinical_breakpoints.html
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Use as.sir() to transform MICs or disks measurements to SIR values.">AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ Use as.sir() to transform MICs or disks measurements to SIR values.">Details
-
Different types of breakpoints
+
Different Types of Breakpoints
Supported types of breakpoints are ECOFF, animal, and human. ECOFF (Epidemiological cut-off) values are used in antimicrobial susceptibility testing to differentiate between wild-type and non-wild-type strains of bacteria or fungi.
@@ -106,28 +106,35 @@ Use as.sir() to transform MICs or disks measurements to SIR values.">
-
Imported from WHONET
+
Imported From WHONET
Clinical breakpoints in this package were validated through and imported from WHONET, a free desktop Windows application developed and supported by the WHO Collaborating Centre for Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance. More can be read on their website. The developers of WHONET and this AMR package have been in contact about sharing their work. We highly appreciate their great development on the WHONET software.
Our import and reproduction script can be found here: <https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/data-raw/reproduction scripts/reproduction_of_clinical_breakpoints.R>.
-
Response from CLSI and EUCAST
+
Response From CLSI and EUCAST
The CEO of CLSI and the chairman of EUCAST have endorsed the work and public use of this AMR package (and consequently the use of their breakpoints) in June 2023, when future development of distributing clinical breakpoints was discussed in a meeting between CLSI, EUCAST, WHO, developers of WHONET software, and developers of this AMR package.
-
Download
+
Download Note
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository. They allow for machine reading EUCAST and CLSI guidelines, which is almost impossible with the MS Excel and PDF files distributed by EUCAST and CLSI, though initiatives have started to overcome these burdens.
-
NOTE: this AMR package (and the WHONET software as well) contains rather complex internal methods to apply the guidelines. For example, some breakpoints must be applied on certain species groups (which are in case of this package available through the microorganisms.groups data set). It is important that this is considered when using the breakpoints for own use.
+
This AMR package (and the WHONET software as well) contains rather complex internal methods to apply the guidelines. For example, some breakpoints must be applied on certain species groups (which are in case of this package available through the microorganisms.groups data set). It is important that this is considered when implementing the breakpoints for own use.
+
+
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
diff --git a/reference/count.html b/reference/count.html
index 5dbe2e487..5fe960932 100644
--- a/reference/count.html
+++ b/reference/count.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ count_resistant() should be used to count resistant isolates, count_susceptible(
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/custom_eucast_rules.html b/reference/custom_eucast_rules.html
index 4fe545096..fb4fb9084 100644
--- a/reference/custom_eucast_rules.html
+++ b/reference/custom_eucast_rules.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/dosage.html b/reference/dosage.html
index 868afab64..756e2dc0f 100644
--- a/reference/dosage.html
+++ b/reference/dosage.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -72,8 +72,12 @@
eucast_version Version number of the EUCAST Clinical Breakpoints guideline to which these dosages apply, either 13, 12, or 11
-
Details
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
diff --git a/reference/eucast_rules.html b/reference/eucast_rules.html
index 32a7178e8..8e9d74757 100644
--- a/reference/eucast_rules.html
+++ b/reference/eucast_rules.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ To improve the interpretation of the antibiogram before EUCAST rules are applied
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ Leclercq et al. EUCAST expert rules in antimicrobial susceptibility test
ampc_cephalosporin_resistance
-
a character value that should be applied to cefotaxime, ceftriaxone and ceftazidime for AmpC de-repressed cephalosporin-resistant mutants - the default is NA. Currently only works when version_expertrules is 3.2 and higher; these version of 'EUCAST Expert Rules on Enterobacterales' state that results of cefotaxime, ceftriaxone and ceftazidime should be reported with a note, or results should be suppressed (emptied) for these three drugs. A value of NA (the default) for this argument will remove results for these three drugs, while e.g. a value of "R" will make the results for these drugs resistant. Use NULL or FALSE to not alter results for these three drugs of AmpC de-repressed cephalosporin-resistant mutants. Using TRUE is equal to using "R". For EUCAST Expert Rules v3.2, this rule applies to: Citrobacter braakii, Citrobacter freundii, Citrobacter gillenii, Citrobacter murliniae, Citrobacter rodenticum, Citrobacter sedlakii, Citrobacter werkmanii, Citrobacter youngae, Enterobacter, Hafnia alvei, Klebsiella aerogenes, Morganella morganii, Providencia, and Serratia.
+
(only applies when rules contains "expert" or "all") a character value that should be applied to cefotaxime, ceftriaxone and ceftazidime for AmpC de-repressed cephalosporin-resistant mutants - the default is NA. Currently only works when version_expertrules is 3.2 and higher; these versions of 'EUCAST Expert Rules on Enterobacterales' state that results of cefotaxime, ceftriaxone and ceftazidime should be reported with a note, or results should be suppressed (emptied) for these three drugs. A value of NA (the default) for this argument will remove results for these three drugs, while e.g. a value of "R" will make the results for these drugs resistant. Use NULL or FALSE to not alter results for these three drugs of AmpC de-repressed cephalosporin-resistant mutants. Using TRUE is equal to using "R". For EUCAST Expert Rules v3.2, this rule applies to: Citrobacter braakii, Citrobacter freundii, Citrobacter gillenii, Citrobacter murliniae, Citrobacter rodenticum, Citrobacter sedlakii, Citrobacter werkmanii, Citrobacter youngae, Enterobacter, Hafnia alvei, Klebsiella aerogenes, Morganella morganii, Providencia, and Serratia.
only_sir_columns
@@ -184,10 +184,12 @@ Leclercq et al. EUCAST expert rules in antimicrobial susceptibility test
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
@@ -230,8 +232,8 @@ Leclercq et al. EUCAST expert rules in antimicrobial susceptibility test
head(b)#> mo VAN AMX COL CAZ CXM PEN FOX
-#> 1 Staphylococcus aureus - S - R S S S
-#> 2 Enterococcus faecalis - - - R R S R
+#> 1 Staphylococcus aureus - S R R S S S
+#> 2 Enterococcus faecalis - - R R R S R#> 3 Escherichia coli R - - - - R S#> 4 Klebsiella pneumoniae R R - - - R S#> 5 Pseudomonas aeruginosa R R - - R R R
@@ -250,9 +252,9 @@ Leclercq et al. EUCAST expert rules in antimicrobial susceptibility test
#> 1 1 AMX Staphylococcus aureus - S Breakpoints#> 2 1 CXM Staphylococcus aureus - S Breakpoints#> 3 1 CAZ Staphylococcus aureus - R Expected phenotypes
-#> 4 2 CAZ Enterococcus faecalis - R Expected phenotypes
-#> 5 2 CXM Enterococcus faecalis - R Expected phenotypes
-#> 6 2 FOX Enterococcus faecalis S R Expected phenotypes
+#> 4 1 COL Staphylococcus aureus - R Expected phenotypes
+#> 5 2 CAZ Enterococcus faecalis - R Expected phenotypes
+#> 6 2 COL Enterococcus faecalis - R Expected phenotypes#> rule_name#> 1 Staphylococcus#> 2 Staphylococcus
diff --git a/reference/example_isolates.html b/reference/example_isolates.html
index a6c08b9d4..e727444f5 100644
--- a/reference/example_isolates.html
+++ b/reference/example_isolates.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -70,8 +70,12 @@
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
AMX:GEN 4 different antimicrobials that have to be transformed with as.sir()
-
Details
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
-
They allow for machine reading EUCAST and CLSI guidelines, which is almost impossible with the MS Excel and PDF files distributed by EUCAST and CLSI.
-
-
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
intrinsic_resistant
-#># A tibble: 196,665 × 2
-#> mo ab
-#><mo><ab>
-#> 1B_ACRHB ACM
-#> 2B_ACRHB ASP
-#> 3B_ACRHB AVO
-#> 4B_ACRHB AZM
-#> 5B_ACRHB PEN
-#> 6B_ACRHB BLM
-#> 7B_ACRHB CDZ
-#> 8B_ACRHB CLR
-#> 9B_ACRHB CLI
-#>10B_ACRHB CYC
-#># ℹ 196,655 more rows
+#># A tibble: 271,905 × 2
+#> mo ab
+#><mo><ab>
+#> 1B_GRAMP ATM
+#> 2B_GRAMP COL
+#> 3B_GRAMP NAL
+#> 4B_GRAMP PLB
+#> 5B_GRAMP TEM
+#> 6B_ANAER-POS ATM
+#> 7B_ANAER-POS COL
+#> 8B_ANAER-POS NAL
+#> 9B_ANAER-POS PLB
+#>10B_ANAER-POS TEM
+#># ℹ 271,895 more rows
-
Details
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
mo_name Name of the microorganism belonging in the species group / microbiological complex, as retrieved with mo_name()
-
Details
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
Download Our Reference Data
+
+
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
diff --git a/reference/microorganisms.html b/reference/microorganisms.html
index c1a28b511..49f2e73cd 100644
--- a/reference/microorganisms.html
+++ b/reference/microorganisms.html
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
Data Set with 78 679 Taxonomic Records of Microorganisms — microorganisms • AMR (for R)
+This data set is carefully crafted, yet made 100% reproducible from public and authoritative taxonomic sources (using this script(https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/data-raw/reproduction scripts/reproduction_of_microorganisms.R)), namely: List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) for bacteria, MycoBank for fungi, and Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) for all others taxons.">
Skip to contents
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ This data set is carefully crafted, yet made 100% reproducible from public and a
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ This data set is carefully crafted, yet made 100% reproducible from public and a
A data set containing the full microbial taxonomy (last updated: June 24th, 2024) of six kingdoms. This data set is the backbone of this AMR package. MO codes can be looked up using as.mo() and microorganism properties can be looked up using any of the mo_* functions.
-
This data set is carefully crafted, yet made 100% reproducible from public and authoritative taxonomic sources (using this script), namely: List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) for bacteria, MycoBank for fungi, and Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) for all others taxons.
+
This data set is carefully crafted, yet made 100% reproducible from public and authoritative taxonomic sources (using this script(https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/data-raw/reproduction scripts/reproduction_of_microorganisms.R)), namely: List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) for bacteria, MycoBank for fungi, and Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) for all others taxons.
@@ -132,16 +132,17 @@ Public Health Information Network Vocabulary Access and Distribution System (PHI
1 entry of Blastocystis (B. hominis), although it officially does not exist (Noel et al. 2005, PMID 15634993)
1 entry of Moraxella (M. catarrhalis), which was formally named Branhamella catarrhalis (Catlin, 1970) though this change was never accepted within the field of clinical microbiology
8 other 'undefined' entries (unknown, unknown Gram-negatives, unknown Gram-positives, unknown yeast, unknown fungus, and unknown anaerobic Gram-pos/Gram-neg bacteria)
-
The syntax used to transform the original data to a cleansed R format, can be found here.
+
The syntax used to transform the original data to a cleansed R format, can be found here(https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/data-raw/reproduction scripts/reproduction_of_microorganisms.R).
-
-
Direct download
+
+
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
-
-
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
All matches are sorted descending on their matching score and for all user input values, the top match will be returned. This will lead to the effect that e.g., "E. coli" will return the microbial ID of Escherichia coli (\(m = 0.688\), a highly prevalent microorganism found in humans) and not Entamoeba coli (\(m = 0.381\), a less prevalent microorganism in humans), although the latter would alphabetically come first.
-
Reference Data Publicly Available
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
Bartlett A et al. (2022). A comprehensive list of bacterial pathogens infecting humansMicrobiology 168:001269; doi:10.1099/mic.0.001269
-
Reference Data Publicly Available
+
Download Our Reference Data
-
All data sets in this AMR package (about microorganisms, antimicrobials, SIR interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata. We also provide tab-separated plain text files that are machine-readable and suitable for input in any software program, such as laboratory information systems. Please visit our website for the download links. The actual files are of course available on our GitHub repository.
+
All reference data sets in the AMR package - including information on microorganisms, antimicrobials, and clinical breakpoints - are freely available for download in multiple formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, and Stata.
+
For maximum compatibility, we also provide machine-readable, tab-separated plain text files suitable for use in any software, including laboratory information systems.
@@ -491,7 +493,7 @@
}#>ℹ Using column 'mo' as input for mo_is_intrinsic_resistant()#>ℹ Using column 'mo' as input for mo_genus()
-#># A tibble: 16 × 2
+#># A tibble: 19 × 2#> `mo_genus()` n#><chr><int>#> 1 Escherichia 467
@@ -501,15 +503,18 @@
#> 5 Serratia 25#> 6 Enterobacter 23#> 7 Citrobacter 11
-#> 8 Acinetobacter 6
-#> 9 Morganella 6
-#>10 Pantoea 4
-#>11 Salmonella 3
-#>12 Stenotrophomonas 2
-#>13 Enterococcus 1
-#>14 Hafnia 1
-#>15 Leuconostoc 1
-#>16 Pseudescherichia 1
+#> 8 Haemophilus 9
+#> 9 Acinetobacter 6
+#>10 Morganella 6
+#>11 Pantoea 4
+#>12 Salmonella 3
+#>13 Neisseria 2
+#>14 Stenotrophomonas 2
+#>15 Campylobacter 1
+#>16 Enterococcus 1
+#>17 Hafnia 1
+#>18 Leuconostoc 1
+#>19 Pseudescherichia 1# get a list with the complete taxonomy (from kingdom to subspecies)mo_taxonomy("Klebsiella pneumoniae")
diff --git a/reference/mo_source.html b/reference/mo_source.html
index f1f36acd2..79a35044f 100644
--- a/reference/mo_source.html
+++ b/reference/mo_source.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ This is the fastest way to have your organisation (or analysis) specific codes p
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/pca.html b/reference/pca.html
index b1ab56e3d..04b7d3375 100644
--- a/reference/pca.html
+++ b/reference/pca.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/plot.html b/reference/plot.html
index f389c5c04..57d499685 100644
--- a/reference/plot.html
+++ b/reference/plot.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ Especially the scale_*_mic() functions are relevant wrappers to plot MIC values
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/proportion.html b/reference/proportion.html
index 13f43615c..2a489a49d 100644
--- a/reference/proportion.html
+++ b/reference/proportion.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ resistance() should be used to calculate resistance, susceptibility() should be
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/random.html b/reference/random.html
index 56b715575..6917a9baa 100644
--- a/reference/random.html
+++ b/reference/random.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/resistance_predict.html b/reference/resistance_predict.html
index 9a4b6019a..69bfdeac6 100644
--- a/reference/resistance_predict.html
+++ b/reference/resistance_predict.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/skewness.html b/reference/skewness.html
index 78f26d9b4..f18f3e2ce 100644
--- a/reference/skewness.html
+++ b/reference/skewness.html
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ When negative ('left-skewed'): the left tail is longer; the mass of the distribu
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/top_n_microorganisms.html b/reference/top_n_microorganisms.html
index ae0847432..738806191 100644
--- a/reference/top_n_microorganisms.html
+++ b/reference/top_n_microorganisms.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
+ 2.1.1.9228
diff --git a/reference/translate.html b/reference/translate.html
index ba9237cea..40268a11b 100644
--- a/reference/translate.html
+++ b/reference/translate.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
AMR (for R)
- 2.1.1.9227
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-[{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"introduction","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Introduction","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"Conducting AMR data analysis unfortunately requires -depth knowledge different scientific fields, makes hard right. least, requires: Good questions (always start !) reliable data thorough understanding (clinical) epidemiology, understand clinical epidemiological relevance possible bias results thorough understanding (clinical) microbiology/infectious diseases, understand microorganisms causal infections implications pharmaceutical treatment, well understanding intrinsic acquired microbial resistance Experience data analysis microbiological tests results, understand determination limitations MIC values interpretations SIR values Availability biological taxonomy microorganisms probably normalisation factors pharmaceuticals, defined daily doses (DDD) Available (inter-)national guidelines, profound methods apply course, instantly provide knowledge experience. AMR package, aimed providing (1) tools simplify antimicrobial resistance data cleaning, transformation analysis, (2) methods easily incorporate international guidelines (3) scientifically reliable reference data, including requirements mentioned . AMR package enables standardised reproducible AMR data analysis, application evidence-based rules, determination first isolates, translation various codes microorganisms antimicrobial agents, determination (multi-drug) resistant microorganisms, calculation antimicrobial resistance, prevalence future trends.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"preparation","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Preparation","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"tutorial, create fake demonstration data work . can skip Cleaning data already data ready. start analysis, try make structure data generally look like :","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"needed-r-packages","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Preparation","what":"Needed R packages","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"many uses R, need additional packages AMR data analysis. package works closely together tidyverse packages dplyr ggplot2 RStudio. tidyverse tremendously improves way conduct data science - allows natural way writing syntaxes creating beautiful plots R. also use cleaner package, can used cleaning data creating frequency tables. AMR package contains data set example_isolates_unclean, might look data users extracted laboratory systems: AMR data analysis, like microorganism column contain valid, --date taxonomy, antibiotic columns cleaned SIR values well.","code":"library(dplyr) library(ggplot2) library(AMR) # (if not yet installed, install with:) # install.packages(c(\"dplyr\", \"ggplot2\", \"AMR\")) example_isolates_unclean #> # A tibble: 3,000 × 8 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN #> #> 1 J3 A 2012-11-21 E. coli R I S S #> 2 R7 A 2018-04-03 K. pneumoniae R I S S #> 3 P3 A 2014-09-19 E. coli R S S S #> 4 P10 A 2015-12-10 E. coli S I S S #> 5 B7 A 2015-03-02 E. coli S S S S #> 6 W3 A 2018-03-31 S. aureus R S R S #> 7 J8 A 2016-06-14 E. coli R S S S #> 8 M3 A 2015-10-25 E. coli R S S S #> 9 J3 A 2019-06-19 E. coli S S S S #> 10 G6 A 2015-04-27 S. aureus S S S S #> # ℹ 2,990 more rows # we will use 'our_data' as the data set name for this tutorial our_data <- example_isolates_unclean"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"taxonomy-of-microorganisms","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Preparation","what":"Taxonomy of microorganisms","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":".mo(), users can transform arbitrary microorganism names codes current taxonomy. AMR package contains --date taxonomic data. specific, currently included data retrieved 24 Jun 2024. codes AMR packages come .mo() short, still human readable. importantly, .mo() supports kinds input: first character codes denote taxonomic kingdom, Bacteria (B), Fungi (F), Protozoa (P). AMR package also contain functions directly retrieve taxonomic properties, name, genus, species, family, order, even Gram-stain. start mo_ use .mo() internally, still arbitrary user input can used: Now can thus clean data: Apparently, uncertainty translation taxonomic codes. Let’s check : ’s good.","code":"as.mo(\"Klebsiella pneumoniae\") #> Class 'mo' #> [1] B_KLBSL_PNMN as.mo(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> Class 'mo' #> [1] B_KLBSL_PNMN as.mo(\"KLEPNE\") #> Class 'mo' #> [1] B_KLBSL_PNMN as.mo(\"KLPN\") #> Class 'mo' #> [1] B_KLBSL_PNMN mo_family(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> [1] \"Enterobacteriaceae\" mo_genus(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> [1] \"Klebsiella\" mo_species(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> [1] \"pneumoniae\" mo_gramstain(\"Klebsiella pneumoniae\") #> [1] \"Gram-negative\" mo_ref(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> [1] \"Trevisan, 1887\" mo_snomed(\"K. pneumoniae\") #> [[1]] #> [1] \"1098101000112102\" \"446870005\" \"1098201000112108\" \"409801009\" #> [5] \"56415008\" \"714315002\" \"713926009\" our_data$bacteria <- as.mo(our_data$bacteria, info = TRUE) #> ℹ Retrieved values from the microorganisms.codes data set for \"ESCCOL\", #> \"KLEPNE\", \"STAAUR\", and \"STRPNE\". #> ℹ Microorganism translation was uncertain for four microorganisms. Run #> mo_uncertainties() to review these uncertainties, or use #> add_custom_microorganisms() to add custom entries. mo_uncertainties() #> Matching scores are based on the resemblance between the input and the full #> taxonomic name, and the pathogenicity in humans. See ?mo_matching_score. #> Colour keys: 0.000-0.549 0.550-0.649 0.650-0.749 0.750-1.000 #> #> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #> \"E. coli\" -> Escherichia coli (B_ESCHR_COLI, 0.688) #> Also matched: Enterococcus crotali (0.650), Escherichia coli coli #> (0.643), Escherichia coli expressing (0.611), Enterobacter cowanii #> (0.600), Enterococcus columbae (0.595), Enterococcus camelliae (0.591), #> Enterococcus casseliflavus (0.577), Enterobacter cloacae cloacae #> (0.571), Enterobacter cloacae complex (0.571), and Enterobacter cloacae #> dissolvens (0.565) #> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #> \"K. pneumoniae\" -> Klebsiella pneumoniae (B_KLBSL_PNMN, 0.786) #> Also matched: Klebsiella pneumoniae complex (0.707), Klebsiella #> pneumoniae ozaenae (0.707), Klebsiella pneumoniae pneumoniae (0.688), #> Klebsiella pneumoniae rhinoscleromatis (0.658), Klebsiella pasteurii #> (0.500), Klebsiella planticola (0.500), Kingella potus (0.400), #> Kluyveromyces pseudotropicale (0.386), Kluyveromyces pseudotropicalis #> (0.363), and Kosakonia pseudosacchari (0.361) #> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #> \"S. aureus\" -> Staphylococcus aureus (B_STPHY_AURS, 0.690) #> Also matched: Staphylococcus aureus aureus (0.643), Staphylococcus #> argenteus (0.625), Staphylococcus aureus anaerobius (0.625), #> Staphylococcus auricularis (0.615), Salmonella Aurelianis (0.595), #> Salmonella Aarhus (0.588), Salmonella Amounderness (0.587), #> Staphylococcus argensis (0.587), Streptococcus australis (0.587), and #> Salmonella choleraesuis arizonae (0.562) #> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #> \"S. pneumoniae\" -> Streptococcus pneumoniae (B_STRPT_PNMN, 0.750) #> Also matched: Streptococcus pseudopneumoniae (0.700), Streptococcus #> phocae salmonis (0.552), Serratia proteamaculans quinovora (0.545), #> Streptococcus pseudoporcinus (0.536), Staphylococcus piscifermentans #> (0.533), Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (0.532), Serratia #> proteamaculans proteamaculans (0.526), Streptococcus gallolyticus #> pasteurianus (0.526), Salmonella Portanigra (0.524), and Streptococcus #> periodonticum (0.519) #> #> Only the first 10 other matches of each record are shown. Run #> print(mo_uncertainties(), n = ...) to view more entries, or save #> mo_uncertainties() to an object."},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"antibiotic-results","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Preparation","what":"Antibiotic results","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"column antibiotic test results must also cleaned. AMR package comes three new data types work test results: mic minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC), disk disk diffusion diameters, sir SIR data interpreted already. package can also determine SIR values based MIC disk diffusion values, read .sir() page. now, just clean SIR columns data using dplyr: basically cleaning, time start data inclusion.","code":"# method 1, be explicit about the columns: our_data <- our_data %>% mutate_at(vars(AMX:GEN), as.sir) # method 2, let the AMR package determine the eligible columns our_data <- our_data %>% mutate_if(is_sir_eligible, as.sir) # result: our_data #> # A tibble: 3,000 × 8 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN #> #> 1 J3 A 2012-11-21 B_ESCHR_COLI R I S S #> 2 R7 A 2018-04-03 B_KLBSL_PNMN R I S S #> 3 P3 A 2014-09-19 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S #> 4 P10 A 2015-12-10 B_ESCHR_COLI S I S S #> 5 B7 A 2015-03-02 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S #> 6 W3 A 2018-03-31 B_STPHY_AURS R S R S #> 7 J8 A 2016-06-14 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S #> 8 M3 A 2015-10-25 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S #> 9 J3 A 2019-06-19 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S #> 10 G6 A 2015-04-27 B_STPHY_AURS S S S S #> # ℹ 2,990 more rows"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"first-isolates","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Preparation","what":"First isolates","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"need know isolates can actually use analysis without repetition bias. conduct analysis antimicrobial resistance, must include first isolate every patient per episode (Hindler et al., Clin Infect Dis. 2007). , easily get overestimate underestimate resistance antibiotic. Imagine patient admitted MRSA found 5 different blood cultures following weeks (yes, countries like Netherlands blood drawing policies). resistance percentage oxacillin isolates overestimated, included MRSA . clearly selection bias. Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) appoints follows: (…) preparing cumulative antibiogram guide clinical decisions empirical antimicrobial therapy initial infections, first isolate given species per patient, per analysis period (eg, one year) included, irrespective body site, antimicrobial susceptibility profile, phenotypical characteristics (eg, biotype). first isolate easily identified, cumulative antimicrobial susceptibility test data prepared using first isolate generally comparable cumulative antimicrobial susceptibility test data calculated methods, providing duplicate isolates excluded. M39-A4 Analysis Presentation Cumulative Antimicrobial Susceptibility Test Data, 4th Edition. CLSI, 2014. Chapter 6.4 AMR package includes methodology first_isolate() function able apply four different methods defined Hindler et al. 2007: phenotype-based, episode-based, patient-based, isolate-based. right method depends goals analysis, default phenotype-based method case method properly correct duplicate isolates. Read methods first_isolate() page. outcome function can easily added data: 91% suitable resistance analysis! can now filter filter() function, also dplyr package: future use, two syntaxes can shortened: end 2 724 isolates analysis. Now data looks like: Time analysis.","code":"our_data <- our_data %>% mutate(first = first_isolate(info = TRUE)) #> ℹ Determining first isolates using an episode length of 365 days #> ℹ Using column 'bacteria' as input for col_mo. #> ℹ Using column 'date' as input for col_date. #> ℹ Using column 'patient_id' as input for col_patient_id. #> ℹ Basing inclusion on all antimicrobial results, using a points threshold #> of 2 #> => Found 2,724 'phenotype-based' first isolates (90.8% of total where a #> microbial ID was available) our_data_1st <- our_data %>% filter(first == TRUE) our_data_1st <- our_data %>% filter_first_isolate() our_data_1st #> # A tibble: 2,724 × 9 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN first #> #> 1 J3 A 2012-11-21 B_ESCHR_COLI R I S S TRUE #> 2 R7 A 2018-04-03 B_KLBSL_PNMN R I S S TRUE #> 3 P3 A 2014-09-19 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S TRUE #> 4 P10 A 2015-12-10 B_ESCHR_COLI S I S S TRUE #> 5 B7 A 2015-03-02 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S TRUE #> 6 W3 A 2018-03-31 B_STPHY_AURS R S R S TRUE #> 7 M3 A 2015-10-25 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S TRUE #> 8 J3 A 2019-06-19 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S TRUE #> 9 G6 A 2015-04-27 B_STPHY_AURS S S S S TRUE #> 10 P4 A 2011-06-21 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S TRUE #> # ℹ 2,714 more rows"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"analysing-the-data","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Analysing the data","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"base R summary() function gives good first impression, comes support new mo sir classes now data set:","code":"summary(our_data_1st) #> patient_id hospital date #> Length:2724 Length:2724 Min. :2011-01-01 #> Class :character Class :character 1st Qu.:2013-04-07 #> Mode :character Mode :character Median :2015-06-03 #> Mean :2015-06-09 #> 3rd Qu.:2017-08-11 #> Max. :2019-12-27 #> bacteria AMX AMC #> Class :mo Class:sir Class:sir #> :0 %S :41.6% (n=1133) %S :52.6% (n=1432) #> Unique:4 %SDD : 0.0% (n=0) %SDD : 0.0% (n=0) #> #1 :B_ESCHR_COLI %I :16.4% (n=446) %I :12.2% (n=333) #> #2 :B_STPHY_AURS %R :42.0% (n=1145) %R :35.2% (n=959) #> #3 :B_STRPT_PNMN %NI : 0.0% (n=0) %NI : 0.0% (n=0) #> CIP GEN first #> Class:sir Class:sir Mode:logical #> %S :52.5% (n=1431) %S :61.0% (n=1661) TRUE:2724 #> %SDD : 0.0% (n=0) %SDD : 0.0% (n=0) #> %I : 6.5% (n=176) %I : 3.0% (n=82) #> %R :41.0% (n=1117) %R :36.0% (n=981) #> %NI : 0.0% (n=0) %NI : 0.0% (n=0) glimpse(our_data_1st) #> Rows: 2,724 #> Columns: 9 #> $ patient_id \"J3\", \"R7\", \"P3\", \"P10\", \"B7\", \"W3\", \"M3\", \"J3\", \"G6\", \"P4\"… #> $ hospital \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\", \"A\",… #> $ date 2012-11-21, 2018-04-03, 2014-09-19, 2015-12-10, 2015-03-02… #> $ bacteria \"B_ESCHR_COLI\", \"B_KLBSL_PNMN\", \"B_ESCHR_COLI\", \"B_ESCHR_COL… #> $ AMX R, R, R, S, S, R, R, S, S, S, S, R, S, S, R, R, R, R, S, R,… #> $ AMC I, I, S, I, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, R, S, S,… #> $ CIP S, S, S, S, S, R, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S,… #> $ GEN S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, R, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S,… #> $ first TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE,… # number of unique values per column: sapply(our_data_1st, n_distinct) #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP #> 260 3 1854 4 3 3 3 #> GEN first #> 3 1"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"availability-of-species","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Availability of species","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"just get idea species distributed, create frequency table count() based name microorganisms:","code":"our_data %>% count(mo_name(bacteria), sort = TRUE) #> # A tibble: 4 × 2 #> `mo_name(bacteria)` n #> #> 1 Escherichia coli 1518 #> 2 Staphylococcus aureus 730 #> 3 Streptococcus pneumoniae 426 #> 4 Klebsiella pneumoniae 326 our_data_1st %>% count(mo_name(bacteria), sort = TRUE) #> # A tibble: 4 × 2 #> `mo_name(bacteria)` n #> #> 1 Escherichia coli 1321 #> 2 Staphylococcus aureus 682 #> 3 Streptococcus pneumoniae 402 #> 4 Klebsiella pneumoniae 319"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"select-and-filter-with-antibiotic-selectors","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Select and filter with antibiotic selectors","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"Using -called antibiotic class selectors, can select filter columns based antibiotic class antibiotic results :","code":"our_data_1st %>% select(date, aminoglycosides()) #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using column 'GEN' (gentamicin) #> # A tibble: 2,724 × 2 #> date GEN #> #> 1 2012-11-21 S #> 2 2018-04-03 S #> 3 2014-09-19 S #> 4 2015-12-10 S #> 5 2015-03-02 S #> 6 2018-03-31 S #> 7 2015-10-25 S #> 8 2019-06-19 S #> 9 2015-04-27 S #> 10 2011-06-21 S #> # ℹ 2,714 more rows our_data_1st %>% select(bacteria, betalactams()) #> ℹ For betalactams() using columns 'AMX' (amoxicillin) and 'AMC' #> (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) #> # A tibble: 2,724 × 3 #> bacteria AMX AMC #> #> 1 B_ESCHR_COLI R I #> 2 B_KLBSL_PNMN R I #> 3 B_ESCHR_COLI R S #> 4 B_ESCHR_COLI S I #> 5 B_ESCHR_COLI S S #> 6 B_STPHY_AURS R S #> 7 B_ESCHR_COLI R S #> 8 B_ESCHR_COLI S S #> 9 B_STPHY_AURS S S #> 10 B_ESCHR_COLI S S #> # ℹ 2,714 more rows our_data_1st %>% select(bacteria, where(is.sir)) #> # A tibble: 2,724 × 5 #> bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN #> #> 1 B_ESCHR_COLI R I S S #> 2 B_KLBSL_PNMN R I S S #> 3 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S #> 4 B_ESCHR_COLI S I S S #> 5 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S #> 6 B_STPHY_AURS R S R S #> 7 B_ESCHR_COLI R S S S #> 8 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S #> 9 B_STPHY_AURS S S S S #> 10 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S S #> # ℹ 2,714 more rows # filtering using AB selectors is also possible: our_data_1st %>% filter(any(aminoglycosides() == \"R\")) #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using column 'GEN' (gentamicin) #> # A tibble: 981 × 9 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN first #> #> 1 J5 A 2017-12-25 B_STRPT_PNMN R S S R TRUE #> 2 X1 A 2017-07-04 B_STPHY_AURS R S S R TRUE #> 3 B3 A 2016-07-24 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S R TRUE #> 4 V7 A 2012-04-03 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S R TRUE #> 5 C9 A 2017-03-23 B_ESCHR_COLI S S S R TRUE #> 6 R1 A 2018-06-10 B_STPHY_AURS S S S R TRUE #> 7 S2 A 2013-07-19 B_STRPT_PNMN S S S R TRUE #> 8 P5 A 2019-03-09 B_STPHY_AURS S S S R TRUE #> 9 Q8 A 2019-08-10 B_STPHY_AURS S S S R TRUE #> 10 K5 A 2013-03-15 B_STRPT_PNMN S S S R TRUE #> # ℹ 971 more rows our_data_1st %>% filter(all(betalactams() == \"R\")) #> ℹ For betalactams() using columns 'AMX' (amoxicillin) and 'AMC' #> (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) #> # A tibble: 462 × 9 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN first #> #> 1 M7 A 2013-07-22 B_STRPT_PNMN R R S S TRUE #> 2 R10 A 2013-12-20 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 3 R7 A 2015-10-25 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 4 R8 A 2019-10-25 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 5 B6 A 2016-11-20 B_ESCHR_COLI R R R R TRUE #> 6 I7 A 2015-08-19 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S S TRUE #> 7 N3 A 2014-12-29 B_STRPT_PNMN R R R S TRUE #> 8 Q2 A 2019-09-22 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S S TRUE #> 9 X7 A 2011-03-20 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S R TRUE #> 10 V1 A 2018-08-07 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> # ℹ 452 more rows # even works in base R (since R 3.0): our_data_1st[all(betalactams() == \"R\"), ] #> ℹ For betalactams() using columns 'AMX' (amoxicillin) and 'AMC' #> (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) #> # A tibble: 462 × 9 #> patient_id hospital date bacteria AMX AMC CIP GEN first #> #> 1 M7 A 2013-07-22 B_STRPT_PNMN R R S S TRUE #> 2 R10 A 2013-12-20 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 3 R7 A 2015-10-25 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 4 R8 A 2019-10-25 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> 5 B6 A 2016-11-20 B_ESCHR_COLI R R R R TRUE #> 6 I7 A 2015-08-19 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S S TRUE #> 7 N3 A 2014-12-29 B_STRPT_PNMN R R R S TRUE #> 8 Q2 A 2019-09-22 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S S TRUE #> 9 X7 A 2011-03-20 B_ESCHR_COLI R R S R TRUE #> 10 V1 A 2018-08-07 B_STPHY_AURS R R S S TRUE #> # ℹ 452 more rows"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"generate-antibiograms","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Generate antibiograms","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"Since AMR v2.0 (March 2023), easy create different types antibiograms, support 20 different languages. four antibiogram types, proposed Klinker et al. (2021, DOI 10.1177/20499361211011373), supported new antibiogram() function: Traditional Antibiogram (TA) e.g, susceptibility Pseudomonas aeruginosa piperacillin/tazobactam (TZP) Combination Antibiogram (CA) e.g, sdditional susceptibility Pseudomonas aeruginosa TZP + tobramycin versus TZP alone Syndromic Antibiogram (SA) e.g, susceptibility Pseudomonas aeruginosa TZP among respiratory specimens (obtained among ICU patients ) Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination Antibiogram (WISCA) e.g, susceptibility Pseudomonas aeruginosa TZP among respiratory specimens (obtained among ICU patients ) male patients age >=65 years heart failure section, show use antibiogram() function create antibiogram types. starters, included example_isolates data set looks like:","code":"example_isolates #> # A tibble: 2,000 × 46 #> date patient age gender ward mo PEN OXA FLC AMX #> #> 1 2002-01-02 A77334 65 F Clinical B_ESCHR_COLI R NA NA NA #> 2 2002-01-03 A77334 65 F Clinical B_ESCHR_COLI R NA NA NA #> 3 2002-01-07 067927 45 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA R NA #> 4 2002-01-07 067927 45 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA R NA #> 5 2002-01-13 067927 45 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA R NA #> 6 2002-01-13 067927 45 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA R NA #> 7 2002-01-14 462729 78 M Clinical B_STPHY_AURS R NA S R #> 8 2002-01-14 462729 78 M Clinical B_STPHY_AURS R NA S R #> 9 2002-01-16 067927 45 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA R NA #> 10 2002-01-17 858515 79 F ICU B_STPHY_EPDR R NA S NA #> # ℹ 1,990 more rows #> # ℹ 36 more variables: AMC , AMP , TZP , CZO , FEP , #> # CXM , FOX , CTX , CAZ , CRO , GEN , #> # TOB , AMK , KAN , TMP , SXT , NIT , #> # FOS , LNZ , CIP , MFX , VAN , TEC , #> # TCY , TGC , DOX , ERY , CLI , AZM , #> # IPM , MEM , MTR , CHL , COL , MUP , …"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"traditional-antibiogram","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data > Generate antibiograms","what":"Traditional Antibiogram","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"create traditional antibiogram, simply state antibiotics used. antibiotics argument antibiogram() function supports (combination) previously mentioned antibiotic class selectors: Notice antibiogram() function automatically prints right format using Quarto R Markdown (page), even applies italics taxonomic names (using italicise_taxonomy() internally). also uses language OS either English, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian. next example, force language Spanish using language argument:","code":"antibiogram(example_isolates, antibiotics = c(aminoglycosides(), carbapenems())) #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using columns 'GEN' (gentamicin), 'TOB' #> (tobramycin), 'AMK' (amikacin), and 'KAN' (kanamycin) #> ℹ For carbapenems() using columns 'IPM' (imipenem) and 'MEM' (meropenem) antibiogram(example_isolates, mo_transform = \"gramstain\", antibiotics = aminoglycosides(), ab_transform = \"name\", language = \"es\") #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using columns 'GEN' (gentamicin), 'TOB' #> (tobramycin), 'AMK' (amikacin), and 'KAN' (kanamycin)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"combined-antibiogram","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data > Generate antibiograms","what":"Combined Antibiogram","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"create combined antibiogram, use antibiotic codes names plus + character like :","code":"combined_ab <- antibiogram(example_isolates, antibiotics = c(\"TZP\", \"TZP+TOB\", \"TZP+GEN\"), ab_transform = NULL) combined_ab"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"syndromic-antibiogram","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data > Generate antibiograms","what":"Syndromic Antibiogram","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"create syndromic antibiogram, syndromic_group argument must used. can column data, e.g. ifelse() calculations based certain columns:","code":"antibiogram(example_isolates, antibiotics = c(aminoglycosides(), carbapenems()), syndromic_group = \"ward\") #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using columns 'GEN' (gentamicin), 'TOB' #> (tobramycin), 'AMK' (amikacin), and 'KAN' (kanamycin) #> ℹ For carbapenems() using columns 'IPM' (imipenem) and 'MEM' (meropenem)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"weighted-incidence-syndromic-combination-antibiogram-wisca","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data > Generate antibiograms","what":"Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination Antibiogram (WISCA)","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"create Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination Antibiogram (WISCA), simply set wisca = TRUE antibiogram() function, use dedicated wisca() function. Unlike traditional antibiograms, WISCA provides syndrome-based susceptibility estimates, weighted pathogen incidence antimicrobial susceptibility patterns. WISCA uses Bayesian decision model integrate data multiple pathogens, improving empirical therapy guidance, especially low-incidence infections. pathogen-agnostic, meaning results syndrome-based rather stratified microorganism. reliable results, ensure data includes first isolates (use first_isolate()) consider filtering top n species (use top_n_microorganisms()), WISCA outcomes meaningful based robust incidence estimates. patient- syndrome-specific WISCA, run function grouped tibble, .e., using group_by() first:","code":"example_isolates %>% wisca(antibiotics = c(\"TZP\", \"TZP+TOB\", \"TZP+GEN\"), minimum = 10) # Recommended threshold: ≥30 example_isolates %>% top_n_microorganisms(n = 10) %>% group_by(age_group = age_groups(age, c(25, 50, 75)), gender) %>% wisca(antibiotics = c(\"TZP\", \"TZP+TOB\", \"TZP+GEN\"))"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"plotting-antibiograms","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data > Generate antibiograms","what":"Plotting antibiograms","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"Antibiograms can plotted using autoplot() ggplot2 packages, since AMR package provides extension function: calculate antimicrobial resistance sensible way, also correcting results, use resistance() susceptibility() functions.","code":"autoplot(combined_ab)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"resistance-percentages","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Resistance percentages","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"functions resistance() susceptibility() can used calculate antimicrobial resistance susceptibility. specific analyses, functions proportion_S(), proportion_SI(), proportion_I(), proportion_IR() proportion_R() can used determine proportion specific antimicrobial outcome. functions contain minimum argument, denoting minimum required number test results returning value. functions otherwise return NA. default minimum = 30, following CLSI M39-A4 guideline applying microbial epidemiology. per EUCAST guideline 2019, calculate resistance proportion R (proportion_R(), equal resistance()) susceptibility proportion S (proportion_SI(), equal susceptibility()). functions can used : can used conjunction group_by() summarise(), dplyr package:","code":"our_data_1st %>% resistance(AMX) #> [1] 0.4203377 our_data_1st %>% group_by(hospital) %>% summarise(amoxicillin = resistance(AMX)) #> # A tibble: 3 × 2 #> hospital amoxicillin #> #> 1 A 0.340 #> 2 B 0.551 #> 3 C 0.370"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"interpreting-mic-and-disk-diffusion-values","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Interpreting MIC and Disk Diffusion Values","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"Minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) values disk diffusion diameters can interpreted clinical breakpoints (SIR) using .sir(). ’s example randomly generated MIC values Klebsiella pneumoniae ciprofloxacin: allows direct interpretation according EUCAST CLSI breakpoints, facilitating automated AMR data processing.","code":"set.seed(123) mic_values <- random_mic(100) sir_values <- as.sir(mic_values, mo = \"K. pneumoniae\", ab = \"cipro\", guideline = \"EUCAST 2024\") #> #> ℹ Run sir_interpretation_history() afterwards to retrieve a logbook with #> all the details of the breakpoint interpretations. #> #> Interpreting MIC values: 'cipro' (CIP, ciprofloxacin), EUCAST 2024... NOTE #> • Multiple breakpoints available for ciprofloxacin (CIP) in Klebsiella pneumoniae - assuming body site 'Non-meningitis'. my_data <- tibble(MIC = mic_values, SIR = sir_values) my_data #> # A tibble: 100 × 2 #> MIC SIR #> #> 1 16.000 R #> 2 0.005 S #> 3 1.000 R #> 4 >=256.000 R #> 5 2.000 R #> 6 0.025 S #> 7 16.000 R #> 8 0.025 S #> 9 0.500 I #> 10 0.005 S #> # ℹ 90 more rows"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR.html","id":"plotting-mic-and-sir-interpretations","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Analysing the data","what":"Plotting MIC and SIR Interpretations","title":"How to conduct AMR data analysis","text":"can visualise MIC distributions SIR interpretations using ggplot2, using new scale_y_mic() y-axis scale_colour_sir() colour-code SIR categories. plot provides intuitive way assess susceptibility patterns across different groups incorporating clinical breakpoints. straightforward less manual approach, ggplot2’s function autoplot() extended package directly plot MIC disk diffusion values: Author: Dr. Matthijs Berends, 23rd Feb 2025","code":"# add a group my_data$group <- rep(c(\"A\", \"B\", \"C\", \"D\"), each = 25) ggplot(my_data, aes(x = group, y = MIC, colour = SIR)) + geom_jitter(width = 0.2, size = 2) + geom_boxplot(fill = NA, colour = \"grey40\") + scale_y_mic() + scale_colour_sir() + labs(title = \"MIC Distribution and SIR Interpretation\", x = \"Sample Groups\", y = \"MIC (mg/L)\") autoplot(mic_values) # by providing `mo` and `ab`, colours will indicate the SIR interpretation: autoplot(mic_values, mo = \"K. pneumoniae\", ab = \"cipro\", guideline = \"EUCAST 2024\")"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"introduction","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Introduction","title":"AMR for Python","text":"AMR package R powerful tool antimicrobial resistance (AMR) analysis. provides extensive features handling microbial antimicrobial data. However, work primarily Python, now intuitive option available: AMR Python package. Python package wrapper around AMR R package. uses rpy2 package internally. Despite need R installed, Python users can now easily work AMR data directly Python code.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"prerequisites","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Prerequisites","title":"AMR for Python","text":"package tested virtual environment (venv). can set environment running: can activate environment, venv ready work .","code":"# linux and macOS: python -m venv /path/to/new/virtual/environment # Windows: python -m venv C:\\path\\to\\new\\virtual\\environment"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"install-amr","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Install AMR","title":"AMR for Python","text":"Since Python package available official Python Package Index, can just run: Make sure R installed. need install AMR R package, installed automatically. Linux: macOS (using Homebrew): Windows, visit CRAN download page download install R.","code":"pip install AMR # Ubuntu / Debian sudo apt install r-base # Fedora: sudo dnf install R # CentOS/RHEL sudo yum install R brew install r"},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"cleaning-taxonomy","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Examples of Usage","what":"Cleaning Taxonomy","title":"AMR for Python","text":"’s example demonstrates clean microorganism drug names using AMR Python package:","code":"import pandas as pd import AMR # Sample data data = { \"MOs\": ['E. coli', 'ESCCOL', 'esco', 'Esche coli'], \"Drug\": ['Cipro', 'CIP', 'J01MA02', 'Ciproxin'] } df = pd.DataFrame(data) # Use AMR functions to clean microorganism and drug names df['MO_clean'] = AMR.mo_name(df['MOs']) df['Drug_clean'] = AMR.ab_name(df['Drug']) # Display the results print(df)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"explanation","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Examples of Usage > Cleaning Taxonomy","what":"Explanation","title":"AMR for Python","text":"mo_name: function standardises microorganism names. , different variations Escherichia coli (“E. coli”, “ESCCOL”, “esco”, “Esche coli”) converted correct, standardised form, “Escherichia coli”. ab_name: Similarly, function standardises antimicrobial names. different representations ciprofloxacin (e.g., “Cipro”, “CIP”, “J01MA02”, “Ciproxin”) converted standard name, “Ciprofloxacin”.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"calculating-amr","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Examples of Usage","what":"Calculating AMR","title":"AMR for Python","text":"","code":"import AMR import pandas as pd df = AMR.example_isolates result = AMR.resistance(df[\"AMX\"]) print(result) [0.59555556]"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"generating-antibiograms","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Examples of Usage","what":"Generating Antibiograms","title":"AMR for Python","text":"One core functions AMR package generating antibiogram, table summarises antimicrobial susceptibility bacterial isolates. ’s can generate antibiogram Python: example, generate antibiogram selecting various antibiotics.","code":"result2a = AMR.antibiogram(df[[\"mo\", \"AMX\", \"CIP\", \"TZP\"]]) print(result2a) result2b = AMR.antibiogram(df[[\"mo\", \"AMX\", \"CIP\", \"TZP\"]], mo_transform = \"gramstain\") print(result2b)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"taxonomic-data-sets-now-in-python","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Examples of Usage","what":"Taxonomic Data Sets Now in Python!","title":"AMR for Python","text":"Python user, might like important data sets AMR R package, microorganisms, antimicrobials, clinical_breakpoints, example_isolates, now available regular Python data frames:","code":"AMR.microorganisms AMR.antimicrobials"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_for_Python.html","id":"conclusion","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Conclusion","title":"AMR for Python","text":"AMR Python package, Python users can now effortlessly call R functions AMR R package. eliminates need complex rpy2 configurations provides clean, easy--use interface antimicrobial resistance analysis. examples provided demonstrate can applied typical workflows, standardising microorganism antimicrobial names calculating resistance. just running import AMR, users can seamlessly integrate robust features R AMR package Python workflows. Whether ’re cleaning data analysing resistance patterns, AMR Python package makes easy work AMR data Python.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"objective","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Objective","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"goal build predictive model using tidymodels framework determine Gramstain microorganism based microbial data. : Preprocess data using selector functions aminoglycosides() betalactams(). Define logistic regression model prediction. Use structured tidymodels workflow preprocess, train, evaluate model.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"data-preparation","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Data Preparation","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"begin loading required libraries preparing example_isolates dataset AMR package. Explanation: aminoglycosides() betalactams() dynamically select columns antimicrobials classes. drop_na() ensures model receives complete cases training.","code":"# Load required libraries library(AMR) # For AMR data analysis library(tidymodels) # For machine learning workflows, and data manipulation (dplyr, tidyr, ...) #> ── Attaching packages ────────────────────────────────────── tidymodels 1.3.0 ── #> ✔ broom 1.0.7 ✔ recipes 1.2.1 #> ✔ dials 1.4.0 ✔ rsample 1.2.1 #> ✔ dplyr 1.1.4 ✔ tibble 3.2.1 #> ✔ ggplot2 3.5.1 ✔ tidyr 1.3.1 #> ✔ infer 1.0.7 ✔ tune 1.3.0 #> ✔ modeldata 1.4.0 ✔ workflows 1.2.0 #> ✔ parsnip 1.3.1 ✔ workflowsets 1.1.0 #> ✔ purrr 1.0.4 ✔ yardstick 1.3.2 #> ── Conflicts ───────────────────────────────────────── tidymodels_conflicts() ── #> ✖ purrr::discard() masks scales::discard() #> ✖ dplyr::filter() masks stats::filter() #> ✖ dplyr::lag() masks stats::lag() #> ✖ recipes::step() masks stats::step() # Select relevant columns for prediction data <- example_isolates %>% # select AB results dynamically select(mo, aminoglycosides(), betalactams()) %>% # replace NAs with NI (not-interpretable) mutate(across(where(is.sir), ~replace_na(.x, \"NI\")), # make factors of SIR columns across(where(is.sir), as.integer), # get Gramstain of microorganisms mo = as.factor(mo_gramstain(mo))) %>% # drop NAs - the ones without a Gramstain (fungi, etc.) drop_na() #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using columns 'GEN' (gentamicin), 'TOB' #> (tobramycin), 'AMK' (amikacin), and 'KAN' (kanamycin) #> ℹ For betalactams() using columns 'PEN' (benzylpenicillin), 'OXA' #> (oxacillin), 'FLC' (flucloxacillin), 'AMX' (amoxicillin), 'AMC' #> (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid), 'AMP' (ampicillin), 'TZP' #> (piperacillin/tazobactam), 'CZO' (cefazolin), 'FEP' (cefepime), 'CXM' #> (cefuroxime), 'FOX' (cefoxitin), 'CTX' (cefotaxime), 'CAZ' (ceftazidime), #> 'CRO' (ceftriaxone), 'IPM' (imipenem), and 'MEM' (meropenem)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"defining-the-workflow","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Defining the Workflow","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"now define tidymodels workflow, consists three steps: preprocessing, model specification, fitting.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"preprocessing-with-a-recipe","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Defining the Workflow","what":"1. Preprocessing with a Recipe","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"create recipe preprocess data modelling. recipe includes least one preprocessing operation, like step_corr(), necessary parameters can estimated training set using prep(): Explanation: recipe(mo ~ ., data = data) take mo column outcome columns predictors. step_corr() removes predictors (.e., antibiotic columns) higher correlation 90%. Notice recipe contains just antibiotic selector functions - need define columns specifically. preparation (retrieved prep()) can see columns variables ‘AMX’ ‘CTX’ removed correlate much existing, variables.","code":"# Define the recipe for data preprocessing resistance_recipe <- recipe(mo ~ ., data = data) %>% step_corr(c(aminoglycosides(), betalactams()), threshold = 0.9) resistance_recipe #> #> ── Recipe ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── #> #> ── Inputs #> Number of variables by role #> outcome: 1 #> predictor: 20 #> #> ── Operations #> • Correlation filter on: c(aminoglycosides(), betalactams()) prep(resistance_recipe) #> ℹ For aminoglycosides() using columns 'GEN' (gentamicin), 'TOB' #> (tobramycin), 'AMK' (amikacin), and 'KAN' (kanamycin) #> ℹ For betalactams() using columns 'PEN' (benzylpenicillin), 'OXA' #> (oxacillin), 'FLC' (flucloxacillin), 'AMX' (amoxicillin), 'AMC' #> (amoxicillin/clavulanic acid), 'AMP' (ampicillin), 'TZP' #> (piperacillin/tazobactam), 'CZO' (cefazolin), 'FEP' (cefepime), 'CXM' #> (cefuroxime), 'FOX' (cefoxitin), 'CTX' (cefotaxime), 'CAZ' (ceftazidime), #> 'CRO' (ceftriaxone), 'IPM' (imipenem), and 'MEM' (meropenem) #> #> ── Recipe ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── #> #> ── Inputs #> Number of variables by role #> outcome: 1 #> predictor: 20 #> #> ── Training information #> Training data contained 1968 data points and no incomplete rows. #> #> ── Operations #> • Correlation filter on: AMX CTX | Trained"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"specifying-the-model","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Defining the Workflow","what":"2. Specifying the Model","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"define logistic regression model since resistance prediction binary classification task. Explanation: logistic_reg() sets logistic regression model. set_engine(\"glm\") specifies use R’s built-GLM engine.","code":"# Specify a logistic regression model logistic_model <- logistic_reg() %>% set_engine(\"glm\") # Use the Generalized Linear Model engine logistic_model #> Logistic Regression Model Specification (classification) #> #> Computational engine: glm"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"building-the-workflow","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Defining the Workflow","what":"3. Building the Workflow","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"bundle recipe model together workflow, organizes entire modeling process.","code":"# Combine the recipe and model into a workflow resistance_workflow <- workflow() %>% add_recipe(resistance_recipe) %>% # Add the preprocessing recipe add_model(logistic_model) # Add the logistic regression model resistance_workflow #> ══ Workflow ════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════ #> Preprocessor: Recipe #> Model: logistic_reg() #> #> ── Preprocessor ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── #> 1 Recipe Step #> #> • step_corr() #> #> ── Model ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── #> Logistic Regression Model Specification (classification) #> #> Computational engine: glm"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"training-and-evaluating-the-model","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Training and Evaluating the Model","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"train model, split data training testing sets. , fit workflow training set evaluate performance. Explanation: initial_split() splits data training testing sets. fit() trains workflow training set. Notice fit(), antibiotic selector functions internally called . training, functions called since stored recipe. Next, evaluate model testing data. Explanation: predict() generates predictions testing set. metrics() computes evaluation metrics like accuracy kappa. appears can predict Gram based AMR results 99.5% accuracy based AMR results aminoglycosides beta-lactam antibiotics. ROC curve looks like :","code":"# Split data into training and testing sets set.seed(123) # For reproducibility data_split <- initial_split(data, prop = 0.8) # 80% training, 20% testing training_data <- training(data_split) # Training set testing_data <- testing(data_split) # Testing set # Fit the workflow to the training data fitted_workflow <- resistance_workflow %>% fit(training_data) # Train the model # Make predictions on the testing set predictions <- fitted_workflow %>% predict(testing_data) # Generate predictions probabilities <- fitted_workflow %>% predict(testing_data, type = \"prob\") # Generate probabilities predictions <- predictions %>% bind_cols(probabilities) %>% bind_cols(testing_data) # Combine with true labels predictions #> # A tibble: 394 × 24 #> .pred_class `.pred_Gram-negative` `.pred_Gram-positive` mo GEN TOB #> #> 1 Gram-positive 1.07e- 1 8.93e- 1 Gram-p… 5 5 #> 2 Gram-positive 3.17e- 8 1.00e+ 0 Gram-p… 5 1 #> 3 Gram-negative 9.99e- 1 1.42e- 3 Gram-n… 5 5 #> 4 Gram-positive 2.22e-16 1 e+ 0 Gram-p… 5 5 #> 5 Gram-negative 9.46e- 1 5.42e- 2 Gram-n… 5 5 #> 6 Gram-positive 1.07e- 1 8.93e- 1 Gram-p… 5 5 #> 7 Gram-positive 2.22e-16 1 e+ 0 Gram-p… 1 5 #> 8 Gram-positive 2.22e-16 1 e+ 0 Gram-p… 4 4 #> 9 Gram-negative 1 e+ 0 2.22e-16 Gram-n… 1 1 #> 10 Gram-positive 6.05e-11 1.00e+ 0 Gram-p… 4 4 #> # ℹ 384 more rows #> # ℹ 18 more variables: AMK , KAN , PEN , OXA , FLC , #> # AMX , AMC , AMP , TZP , CZO , FEP , #> # CXM , FOX , CTX , CAZ , CRO , IPM , MEM # Evaluate model performance metrics <- predictions %>% metrics(truth = mo, estimate = .pred_class) # Calculate performance metrics metrics #> # A tibble: 2 × 3 #> .metric .estimator .estimate #> #> 1 accuracy binary 0.995 #> 2 kap binary 0.989 predictions %>% roc_curve(mo, `.pred_Gram-negative`) %>% autoplot()"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/AMR_with_tidymodels.html","id":"conclusion","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Conclusion","title":"AMR with tidymodels","text":"post, demonstrated build machine learning pipeline tidymodels framework AMR package. combining selector functions like aminoglycosides() betalactams() tidymodels, efficiently prepared data, trained model, evaluated performance. workflow extensible antibiotic classes resistance patterns, empowering users analyse AMR data systematically reproducibly.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/EUCAST.html","id":"introduction","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Introduction","title":"How to apply EUCAST rules","text":"EUCAST rules? European Committee Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) states website: EUCAST expert rules tabulated collection expert knowledge intrinsic resistances, exceptional resistance phenotypes interpretive rules may applied antimicrobial susceptibility testing order reduce errors make appropriate recommendations reporting particular resistances. Europe, lot medical microbiological laboratories already apply rules (Brown et al., 2015). package features latest insights intrinsic resistance unusual phenotypes (v3.1, 2016). Moreover, eucast_rules() function use purpose can also apply additional rules, like forcing ampicillin = R isolates amoxicillin/clavulanic acid = R.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/EUCAST.html","id":"examples","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Examples","title":"How to apply EUCAST rules","text":"rules can used discard impossible bug-drug combinations data. example, Klebsiella produces beta-lactamase prevents ampicillin (amoxicillin) working . words, practically every strain Klebsiella resistant ampicillin. Sometimes, laboratory data can still contain strains ampicillin susceptible ampicillin. antibiogram available identification available, antibiogram re-interpreted based identification (namely, Klebsiella). EUCAST expert rules solve , can applied using eucast_rules(): convenient function mo_is_intrinsic_resistant() uses guideline, allows check one specific microorganisms antimicrobials: EUCAST rules can used correction, can also used filling known resistance susceptibility based results antimicrobials drugs. process called interpretive reading, basically form imputation, part eucast_rules() function well:","code":"oops <- data.frame( mo = c( \"Klebsiella\", \"Escherichia\" ), ampicillin = \"S\" ) oops #> mo ampicillin #> 1 Klebsiella S #> 2 Escherichia S eucast_rules(oops, info = FALSE) #> mo ampicillin #> 1 Klebsiella S #> 2 Escherichia S mo_is_intrinsic_resistant( c(\"Klebsiella\", \"Escherichia\"), \"ampicillin\" ) #> [1] FALSE FALSE mo_is_intrinsic_resistant( \"Klebsiella\", c(\"ampicillin\", \"kanamycin\") ) #> [1] FALSE FALSE data <- data.frame( mo = c( \"Staphylococcus aureus\", \"Enterococcus faecalis\", \"Escherichia coli\", \"Klebsiella pneumoniae\", \"Pseudomonas aeruginosa\" ), VAN = \"-\", # Vancomycin AMX = \"-\", # Amoxicillin COL = \"-\", # Colistin CAZ = \"-\", # Ceftazidime CXM = \"-\", # Cefuroxime PEN = \"S\", # Benzylenicillin FOX = \"S\", # Cefoxitin stringsAsFactors = FALSE ) data eucast_rules(data)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/MDR.html","id":"type-of-input","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Type of input","title":"How to determine multi-drug resistance (MDR)","text":"mdro() function takes data set input, regular data.frame. tries automatically determine right columns info isolates, name species columns results antimicrobial agents. See help page info set right settings data command ?mdro. WHONET data (data), settings automatically set correctly.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/MDR.html","id":"guidelines","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Guidelines","title":"How to determine multi-drug resistance (MDR)","text":"mdro() function support multiple guidelines. can select guideline guideline parameter. Currently supported guidelines (case-insensitive): guideline = \"CMI2012\" (default) Magiorakos AP, Srinivasan et al. “Multidrug-resistant, extensively drug-resistant pandrug-resistant bacteria: international expert proposal interim standard definitions acquired resistance.” Clinical Microbiology Infection (2012) (link) guideline = \"EUCAST3.2\" (simply guideline = \"EUCAST\") European international guideline - EUCAST Expert Rules Version 3.2 “Intrinsic Resistance Unusual Phenotypes” (link) guideline = \"EUCAST3.1\" European international guideline - EUCAST Expert Rules Version 3.1 “Intrinsic Resistance Exceptional Phenotypes Tables” (link) guideline = \"TB\" international guideline multi-drug resistant tuberculosis - World Health Organization “Companion handbook guidelines programmatic management drug-resistant tuberculosis” (link) guideline = \"MRGN\" German national guideline - Mueller et al. (2015) Antimicrobial Resistance Infection Control 4:7. DOI: 10.1186/s13756-015-0047-6 guideline = \"BRMO\" Dutch national guideline - Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu “WIP-richtlijn BRMO (Bijzonder Resistente Micro-Organismen) (ZKH)” (link) Please suggest (country-specific) guidelines letting us know: https://github.com/msberends/AMR/issues/new.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/MDR.html","id":"custom-guidelines","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"Guidelines","what":"Custom Guidelines","title":"How to determine multi-drug resistance (MDR)","text":"can also use custom guideline. Custom guidelines can set custom_mdro_guideline() function. great importance custom rules determine MDROs hospital, e.g., rules dependent ward, state contact isolation variables data. familiar case_when() dplyr package, recognise input method set rules. Rules must set using R considers ‘formula notation’: row/isolate matches first rule, value first ~ (case ‘Elderly Type ’) set MDRO value. Otherwise, second rule tried . maximum number rules unlimited. can print rules set console overview. Colours help reading console supports colours. outcome function can used guideline argument mdro() function: rules set (custom object case) exported shared file location using saveRDS() collaborate multiple users. custom rules set imported using readRDS().","code":"custom <- custom_mdro_guideline( CIP == \"R\" & age > 60 ~ \"Elderly Type A\", ERY == \"R\" & age > 60 ~ \"Elderly Type B\" ) custom #> A set of custom MDRO rules: #> 1. If CIP is R and age is higher than 60 then: Elderly Type A #> 2. If ERY is R and age is higher than 60 then: Elderly Type B #> 3. Otherwise: Negative #> #> Unmatched rows will return NA. #> Results will be of class 'factor', with ordered levels: Negative < Elderly Type A < Elderly Type B x <- mdro(example_isolates, guideline = custom) table(x) #> x #> Negative Elderly Type A Elderly Type B #> 1070 198 732"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/MDR.html","id":"examples","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Examples","title":"How to determine multi-drug resistance (MDR)","text":"mdro() function always returns ordered factor predefined guidelines. example, output default guideline Magiorakos et al. returns factor levels ‘Negative’, ‘MDR’, ‘XDR’ ‘PDR’ order. next example uses example_isolates data set. data set included package contains full antibiograms 2,000 microbial isolates. reflects reality can used practise AMR data analysis. test MDR/XDR/PDR guideline data set, get: Frequency table Class: factor > ordered (numeric) Length: 2,000 Levels: 4: Negative < Multi-drug-resistant (MDR) < Extensively drug-resistant … Available: 1,745 (87.25%, NA: 255 = 12.75%) Unique: 2 another example, create data set determine multi-drug resistant TB: column names automatically verified valid drug names codes, worked exactly way: data set now looks like : can now add interpretation MDR-TB data set. can use: shortcut mdr_tb(): Create frequency table results: Frequency table Class: factor > ordered (numeric) Length: 5,000 Levels: 5: Negative < Mono-resistant < Poly-resistant < Multi-drug-resistant <… Available: 5,000 (100%, NA: 0 = 0%) Unique: 5","code":"library(dplyr) # to support pipes: %>% library(cleaner) # to create frequency tables example_isolates %>% mdro() %>% freq() # show frequency table of the result #> Warning: in mdro(): NA introduced for isolates where the available percentage of #> antimicrobial classes was below 50% (set with pct_required_classes) # random_sir() is a helper function to generate # a random vector with values S, I and R my_TB_data <- data.frame( rifampicin = random_sir(5000), isoniazid = random_sir(5000), gatifloxacin = random_sir(5000), ethambutol = random_sir(5000), pyrazinamide = random_sir(5000), moxifloxacin = random_sir(5000), kanamycin = random_sir(5000) ) my_TB_data <- data.frame( RIF = random_sir(5000), INH = random_sir(5000), GAT = random_sir(5000), ETH = random_sir(5000), PZA = random_sir(5000), MFX = random_sir(5000), KAN = random_sir(5000) ) head(my_TB_data) #> rifampicin isoniazid gatifloxacin ethambutol pyrazinamide moxifloxacin #> 1 I R S S S S #> 2 S S I R R S #> 3 R I I I R I #> 4 I S S S S S #> 5 I I I S I S #> 6 R S R S I I #> kanamycin #> 1 R #> 2 I #> 3 S #> 4 I #> 5 I #> 6 I mdro(my_TB_data, guideline = \"TB\") my_TB_data$mdr <- mdr_tb(my_TB_data) #> ℹ No column found as input for col_mo, assuming all rows contain #> Mycobacterium tuberculosis. freq(my_TB_data$mdr)"},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/PCA.html","id":"transforming","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Transforming","title":"How to conduct principal component analysis (PCA) for AMR","text":"PCA, need transform AMR data first. example_isolates data set package looks like: Now transform data set resistance percentages per taxonomic order genus:","code":"library(AMR) library(dplyr) glimpse(example_isolates) #> Rows: 2,000 #> Columns: 46 #> $ date 2002-01-02, 2002-01-03, 2002-01-07, 2002-01-07, 2002-01-13, 2… #> $ patient \"A77334\", \"A77334\", \"067927\", \"067927\", \"067927\", \"067927\", \"4… #> $ age 65, 65, 45, 45, 45, 45, 78, 78, 45, 79, 67, 67, 71, 71, 75, 50… #> $ gender \"F\", \"F\", \"F\", \"F\", \"F\", \"F\", \"M\", \"M\", \"F\", \"F\", \"M\", \"M\", \"M… #> $ ward \"Clinical\", \"Clinical\", \"ICU\", \"ICU\", \"ICU\", \"ICU\", \"Clinical\"… #> $ mo \"B_ESCHR_COLI\", \"B_ESCHR_COLI\", \"B_STPHY_EPDR\", \"B_STPHY_EPDR\",… #> $ PEN R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, S,… #> $ OXA NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ FLC NA, NA, R, R, R, R, S, S, R, S, S, S, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R… #> $ AMX NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, NA, N… #> $ AMC I, I, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, NA, S, S, I, I, R, I, I, NA, N… #> $ AMP NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, NA, N… #> $ TZP NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ CZO NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, NA,… #> $ FEP NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ CXM I, I, R, R, R, R, S, S, R, S, S, S, S, S, NA, S, S, R, R, S, S… #> $ FOX NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, NA,… #> $ CTX NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, S, S… #> $ CAZ NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, NA, NA, NA, S, S, R, R, … #> $ CRO NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, S, S… #> $ GEN NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ TOB NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, NA, NA… #> $ AMK NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ KAN NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ TMP R, R, S, S, R, R, R, R, S, S, NA, NA, S, S, S, S, S, R, R, R, … #> $ SXT R, R, S, S, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, NA, S, S, S, S, S, NA, N… #> $ NIT NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R,… #> $ FOS NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ LNZ R, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, N… #> $ CIP NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S… #> $ MFX NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ VAN R, R, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, S, S, S, … #> $ TEC R, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, N… #> $ TCY R, R, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, I, S, S, NA, NA, I, R, R, S, I, R, … #> $ TGC NA, NA, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, NA, S, S, NA, NA, NA, R, R, S, NA… #> $ DOX NA, NA, S, S, S, S, S, S, S, NA, S, S, NA, NA, NA, R, R, S, NA… #> $ ERY R, R, R, R, R, R, S, S, R, S, S, S, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, S,… #> $ CLI R, R, NA, NA, NA, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, NA… #> $ AZM R, R, R, R, R, R, S, S, R, S, S, S, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, S,… #> $ IPM NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, S, S, NA, S, S… #> $ MEM NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ MTR NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ CHL NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ COL NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, R, NA, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, … #> $ MUP NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA… #> $ RIF R, R, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, NA, R, R, R, R, R, N… resistance_data <- example_isolates %>% group_by( order = mo_order(mo), # group on anything, like order genus = mo_genus(mo) ) %>% # and genus as we do here summarise_if(is.sir, resistance) %>% # then get resistance of all drugs select( order, genus, AMC, CXM, CTX, CAZ, GEN, TOB, TMP, SXT ) # and select only relevant columns head(resistance_data) #> # A tibble: 6 × 10 #> # Groups: order [5] #> order genus AMC CXM CTX CAZ GEN TOB TMP SXT #> #> 1 (unknown order) (unknown ge… NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA #> 2 Actinomycetales Schaalia NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA #> 3 Bacteroidales Bacteroides NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA #> 4 Campylobacterales Campylobact… NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA #> 5 Caryophanales Gemella NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA #> 6 Caryophanales Listeria NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/PCA.html","id":"perform-principal-component-analysis","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Perform principal component analysis","title":"How to conduct principal component analysis (PCA) for AMR","text":"new pca() function automatically filter rows contain numeric values selected variables, now need : result can reviewed good old summary() function: Good news. first two components explain total 93.3% variance (see PC1 PC2 values Proportion Variance. can create -called biplot base R biplot() function, see antimicrobial resistance per drug explain difference per microorganism.","code":"pca_result <- pca(resistance_data) #> ℹ Columns selected for PCA: \"AMC\", \"CAZ\", \"CTX\", \"CXM\", \"GEN\", \"SXT\", #> \"TMP\", and \"TOB\". Total observations available: 7. summary(pca_result) #> Groups (n=4, named as 'order'): #> [1] \"Caryophanales\" \"Enterobacterales\" \"Lactobacillales\" \"Pseudomonadales\" #> Importance of components: #> PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 #> Standard deviation 2.1539 1.6807 0.6138 0.33879 0.20808 0.03140 1.232e-16 #> Proportion of Variance 0.5799 0.3531 0.0471 0.01435 0.00541 0.00012 0.000e+00 #> Cumulative Proportion 0.5799 0.9330 0.9801 0.99446 0.99988 1.00000 1.000e+00 #> Groups (n=4, named as 'order'): #> [1] \"Caryophanales\" \"Enterobacterales\" \"Lactobacillales\" \"Pseudomonadales\""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/PCA.html","id":"plotting-the-results","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Plotting the results","title":"How to conduct principal component analysis (PCA) for AMR","text":"can’t see explanation points. Perhaps works better new ggplot_pca() function, automatically adds right labels even groups: can also print ellipse per group, edit appearance:","code":"biplot(pca_result) ggplot_pca(pca_result) ggplot_pca(pca_result, ellipse = TRUE) + ggplot2::labs(title = \"An AMR/PCA biplot!\")"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/WHONET.html","id":"import-of-data","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Import of data","title":"How to work with WHONET data","text":"tutorial assumes already imported WHONET data e.g. readxl package. RStudio, can done using menu button ‘Import Dataset’ tab ‘Environment’. Choose option ‘Excel’ select exported file. Make sure date fields imported correctly. example syntax look like : package comes example data set WHONET. use analysis.","code":"library(readxl) data <- read_excel(path = \"path/to/your/file.xlsx\")"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/WHONET.html","id":"preparation","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Preparation","title":"How to work with WHONET data","text":"First, load relevant packages yet . use tidyverse analyses. . don’t know yet, suggest read website: https://www.tidyverse.org/. transform variables simplify automate analysis: Microorganisms transformed microorganism codes (called mo) using Catalogue Life reference data set, contains ~70,000 microorganisms taxonomic kingdoms Bacteria, Fungi Protozoa. tranformation .mo(). function also recognises almost WHONET abbreviations microorganisms. Antimicrobial results interpretations clean valid. words, contain values \"S\", \"\" \"R\". exactly .sir() function . errors warnings, values transformed succesfully. also created package dedicated data cleaning checking, called cleaner package. freq() function can used create frequency tables. let’s check data, couple frequency tables: Frequency table Class: character Length: 500 Available: 500 (100%, NA: 0 = 0%) Unique: 38 Shortest: 11 Longest: 40 (omitted 28 entries, n = 57 [11.4%]) Frequency table Class: factor > ordered > sir (numeric) Length: 500 Levels: 5: S < SDD < < R < NI Available: 481 (96.2%, NA: 19 = 3.8%) Unique: 3 Drug: Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (AMC, J01CR02) Drug group: Beta-lactams/penicillins %SI: 78.59%","code":"library(dplyr) # part of tidyverse library(ggplot2) # part of tidyverse library(AMR) # this package library(cleaner) # to create frequency tables # transform variables data <- WHONET %>% # get microbial ID based on given organism mutate(mo = as.mo(Organism)) %>% # transform everything from \"AMP_ND10\" to \"CIP_EE\" to the new `sir` class mutate_at(vars(AMP_ND10:CIP_EE), as.sir) # our newly created `mo` variable, put in the mo_name() function data %>% freq(mo_name(mo), nmax = 10) # our transformed antibiotic columns # amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (J01CR02) as an example data %>% freq(AMC_ND2)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/WHONET.html","id":"a-first-glimpse-at-results","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"A first glimpse at results","title":"How to work with WHONET data","text":"easy ggplot already give lot information, using included ggplot_sir() function:","code":"data %>% group_by(Country) %>% select(Country, AMP_ND2, AMC_ED20, CAZ_ED10, CIP_ED5) %>% ggplot_sir(translate_ab = \"ab\", facet = \"Country\", datalabels = FALSE)"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"microorganisms-full-microbial-taxonomy","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"microorganisms: Full Microbial Taxonomy","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 78 679 rows 26 columns, containing following column names:mo, fullname, status, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, subspecies, rank, ref, oxygen_tolerance, source, lpsn, lpsn_parent, lpsn_renamed_to, mycobank, mycobank_parent, mycobank_renamed_to, gbif, gbif_parent, gbif_renamed_to, prevalence, snomed. data set R available microorganisms, load AMR package. last updated 26 March 2025 16:19:17 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (1.8 MB) Download tab-separated text file (17.7 MB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (8.7 MB) Download Apache Feather file (8.3 MB) Download Apache Parquet file (3.8 MB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (28.4 MB) Download Stata DTA file (89.5 MB) NOTE: exported files SPSS Stata contain first 50 SNOMED codes per record, file size otherwise exceed 100 MB; file size limit GitHub. file structures compression techniques inefficient. Advice? Use R instead. ’s free much better many ways. tab-separated text file Microsoft Excel workbook contain SNOMED codes comma separated values.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"microorganisms: Full Microbial Taxonomy","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains full microbial taxonomy six kingdoms List Prokaryotic names Standing Nomenclature (LPSN), MycoBank, Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF): Parte, AC et al. (2020). List Prokaryotic names Standing Nomenclature (LPSN) moves DSMZ. International Journal Systematic Evolutionary Microbiology, 70, 5607-5612; . Accessed https://lpsn.dsmz.de June 24th, 2024. Vincent, R et al (2013). MycoBank gearing new horizons. IMA Fungus, 4(2), 371-9; . Accessed https://www.mycobank.org June 24th, 2024. GBIF Secretariat (2023). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset . Accessed https://www.gbif.org June 24th, 2024. Reimer, LC et al. (2022). BacDive 2022: knowledge base standardized bacterial archaeal data. Nucleic Acids Res., 50(D1):D741-D74; . Accessed https://bacdive.dsmz.de July 16th, 2024. Public Health Information Network Vocabulary Access Distribution System (PHIN VADS). US Edition SNOMED CT 1 September 2020. Value Set Name ‘Microorganism’, OID 2.16.840.1.114222.4.11.1009 (v12). URL: https://www.cdc.gov/phin/php/phinvads/","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"example-content","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"microorganisms: Full Microbial Taxonomy","what":"Example content","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"Included (sub)species per taxonomic kingdom: Example rows filtering genus Escherichia:","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"antimicrobials-antibiotic-and-antifungal-drugs","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"antimicrobials: Antibiotic and Antifungal Drugs","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 496 rows 14 columns, containing following column names:ab, cid, name, group, atc, atc_group1, atc_group2, abbreviations, synonyms, oral_ddd, oral_units, iv_ddd, iv_units, loinc. data set R available antimicrobials, load AMR package. last updated 19 March 2025 15:05:24 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (44 kB) Download tab-separated text file (0.1 MB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (75 kB) Download Apache Feather file (0.1 MB) Download Apache Parquet file (0.1 MB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (0.3 MB) Download Stata DTA file (10 kB) tab-separated text, Microsoft Excel, SPSS, Stata files contain ATC codes, common abbreviations, trade names LOINC codes comma separated values.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-1","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"antimicrobials: Antibiotic and Antifungal Drugs","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains EARS-Net ATC codes gathered WHONET, compound IDs PubChem. also contains brand names (synonyms) found PubChem Defined Daily Doses (DDDs) oral parenteral administration. ATC/DDD index Collaborating Centre Drug Statistics Methodology (note: may used commercial purposes, freely available CC website personal use) PubChem US National Library Medicine WHONET software 2019 LOINC (Logical Observation Identifiers Names Codes)","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"antivirals-antiviral-drugs","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"antivirals: Antiviral Drugs","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 120 rows 11 columns, containing following column names:av, name, atc, cid, atc_group, synonyms, oral_ddd, oral_units, iv_ddd, iv_units, loinc. data set R available antivirals, load AMR package. last updated 20 October 2023 12:51:48 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (6 kB) Download tab-separated text file (17 kB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (16 kB) Download Apache Feather file (16 kB) Download Apache Parquet file (13 kB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (32 kB) Download Stata DTA file (78 kB) tab-separated text, Microsoft Excel, SPSS, Stata files contain trade names LOINC codes comma separated values.","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-2","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"antivirals: Antiviral Drugs","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains ATC codes gathered compound IDs PubChem. also contains brand names (synonyms) found PubChem Defined Daily Doses (DDDs) oral parenteral administration. ATC/DDD index Collaborating Centre Drug Statistics Methodology (note: may used commercial purposes, freely available CC website personal use) PubChem US National Library Medicine LOINC (Logical Observation Identifiers Names Codes)","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"clinical_breakpoints-interpretation-from-mic-values-disk-diameters-to-sir","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"clinical_breakpoints: Interpretation from MIC values & disk diameters to SIR","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 34 376 rows 14 columns, containing following column names:guideline, type, host, method, site, mo, rank_index, ab, ref_tbl, disk_dose, breakpoint_S, breakpoint_R, uti, is_SDD. data set R available clinical_breakpoints, load AMR package. last updated 13 March 2025 14:38:39 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (76 kB) Download tab-separated text file (3.1 MB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (2 MB) Download Apache Feather file (1.5 MB) Download Apache Parquet file (0.1 MB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (5.6 MB) Download Stata DTA file (9.6 MB)","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-3","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"clinical_breakpoints: Interpretation from MIC values & disk diameters to SIR","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains interpretation rules MIC values disk diffusion diameters. Included guidelines CLSI (2011-2024) EUCAST (2011-2024). Clinical breakpoints package validated imported WHONET, free desktop Windows application developed supported Collaborating Centre Surveillance Antimicrobial Resistance. can read website. developers WHONET AMR package contact sharing work. highly appreciate development WHONET software. CEO CLSI chairman EUCAST endorsed work public use AMR package (consequently use breakpoints) June 2023, future development distributing clinical breakpoints discussed meeting CLSI, EUCAST, , developers WHONET AMR package. NOTE: AMR package (WHONET software well) contains internal methods apply guidelines, rather complex. example, breakpoints must applied certain species groups (case package available microorganisms.groups data set). important considered using breakpoints use.","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"intrinsic_resistant-intrinsic-bacterial-resistance","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"intrinsic_resistant: Intrinsic Bacterial Resistance","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 196 665 rows 2 columns, containing following column names:mo ab. data set R available intrinsic_resistant, load AMR package. last updated 27 March 2025 14:20:22 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (33 kB) Download tab-separated text file (7.3 MB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (2.1 MB) Download Apache Feather file (1.6 MB) Download Apache Parquet file (66 kB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (10.7 MB) Download Stata DTA file (15.6 MB)","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-4","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"intrinsic_resistant: Intrinsic Bacterial Resistance","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains defined intrinsic resistance EUCAST bug-drug combinations, based ‘EUCAST Expert Rules’ ‘EUCAST Intrinsic Resistance Unusual Phenotypes’ v3.3 (2021).","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"example-content-4","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"intrinsic_resistant: Intrinsic Bacterial Resistance","what":"Example content","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"Example rows filtering Enterobacter cloacae:","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"dosage-dosage-guidelines-from-eucast","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"dosage: Dosage Guidelines from EUCAST","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 503 rows 9 columns, containing following column names:ab, name, type, dose, dose_times, administration, notes, original_txt, eucast_version. data set R available dosage, load AMR package. last updated 22 June 2023 13:10:59 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (3 kB) Download tab-separated text file (43 kB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (25 kB) Download Apache Feather file (21 kB) Download Apache Parquet file (9 kB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (64 kB) Download Stata DTA file (0.1 MB)","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-5","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"dosage: Dosage Guidelines from EUCAST","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"EUCAST breakpoints used package based dosages data set. Currently included dosages data set meant : (), ‘EUCAST Clinical Breakpoint Tables’ v11.0 (2021), ‘EUCAST Clinical Breakpoint Tables’ v12.0 (2022).","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"example_isolates-example-data-for-practice","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"example_isolates: Example Data for Practice","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 2 000 rows 46 columns, containing following column names:date, patient, age, gender, ward, mo, PEN, OXA, FLC, AMX, AMC, AMP, TZP, CZO, FEP, CXM, FOX, CTX, CAZ, CRO, GEN, TOB, AMK, KAN, TMP, SXT, NIT, FOS, LNZ, CIP, MFX, VAN, TEC, TCY, TGC, DOX, ERY, CLI, AZM, IPM, MEM, MTR, CHL, COL, MUP, RIF. data set R available example_isolates, load AMR package. last updated 15 June 2024 13:33:49 UTC. Find info structure data set .","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-6","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"example_isolates: Example Data for Practice","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains randomised fictitious data, reflects reality can used practise AMR data analysis.","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"example_isolates_unclean-example-data-for-practice","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"example_isolates_unclean: Example Data for Practice","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 3 000 rows 8 columns, containing following column names:patient_id, hospital, date, bacteria, AMX, AMC, CIP, GEN. data set R available example_isolates_unclean, load AMR package. last updated 27 August 2022 18:49:37 UTC. Find info structure data set .","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-7","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"example_isolates_unclean: Example Data for Practice","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains randomised fictitious data, reflects reality can used practise AMR data analysis.","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"microorganisms-groups-species-groups-and-microbiological-complexes","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"microorganisms.groups: Species Groups and Microbiological Complexes","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 534 rows 4 columns, containing following column names:mo_group, mo, mo_group_name, mo_name. data set R available microorganisms.groups, load AMR package. last updated 26 March 2025 16:19:17 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (6 kB) Download tab-separated text file (50 kB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (20 kB) Download Apache Feather file (19 kB) Download Apache Parquet file (13 kB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (65 kB) Download Stata DTA file (83 kB)","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-8","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"microorganisms.groups: Species Groups and Microbiological Complexes","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains species groups microbiological complexes, used clinical_breakpoints data set.","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"microorganisms-codes-common-laboratory-codes","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"microorganisms.codes: Common Laboratory Codes","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set 4 971 rows 2 columns, containing following column names:code mo. data set R available microorganisms.codes, load AMR package. last updated 29 September 2024 20:17:56 UTC. Find info structure data set . Direct download links: Download original R Data Structure (RDS) file (22 kB) Download tab-separated text file (0.1 MB) Download Microsoft Excel workbook (82 kB) Download Apache Feather file (85 kB) Download Apache Parquet file (56 kB) Download IBM SPSS Statistics data file (0.1 MB) Download Stata DTA file (0.1 MB)","code":""},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html","id":"source-9","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"microorganisms.codes: Common Laboratory Codes","what":"Source","title":"Data sets for download / own use","text":"data set contains commonly used codes microorganisms, laboratory systems WHONET.","code":""},{"path":[]},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/resistance_predict.html","id":"needed-r-packages","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Needed R packages","title":"How to predict antimicrobial resistance","text":"many uses R, need additional packages AMR data analysis. package works closely together tidyverse packages dplyr ggplot2. tidyverse tremendously improves way conduct data science - allows natural way writing syntaxes creating beautiful plots R. AMR package depends packages even extends use functions.","code":"library(dplyr) library(ggplot2) library(AMR) # (if not yet installed, install with:) # install.packages(c(\"tidyverse\", \"AMR\"))"},{"path":"https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/resistance_predict.html","id":"prediction-analysis","dir":"Articles","previous_headings":"","what":"Prediction analysis","title":"How to predict antimicrobial resistance","text":"package contains function resistance_predict(), takes input functions AMR data analysis. Based date column, calculates cases per year uses regression model predict antimicrobial resistance. basically easy : function look date column col_date set. running commands, summary regression model printed unless using resistance_predict(..., info = FALSE). text printed summary - actual result (output) function data.frame containing year: number observations, actual observed resistance, estimated resistance standard error estimation: function plot available base R, can extended packages depend output based type input. extended function cope resistance predictions: fastest way plot result. automatically adds right axes, error bars, titles, number available observations type model. also support ggplot2 package custom function ggplot_sir_predict() create appealing plots:","code":"# resistance prediction of piperacillin/tazobactam (TZP): resistance_predict(tbl = example_isolates, col_date = \"date\", col_ab = \"TZP\", model = \"binomial\") # or: example_isolates %>% resistance_predict( col_ab = \"TZP\", model = \"binomial\" ) # to bind it to object 'predict_TZP' for example: predict_TZP <- example_isolates %>% resistance_predict( col_ab = \"TZP\", model = \"binomial\" ) predict_TZP #> # A tibble: 34 × 7 #> year value se_min se_max observations observed estimated #> *