Apply susceptibility rules as defined by the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST, http://eucast.org), see Source. This includes (1) expert rules, (2) intrinsic resistance and (3) inferred resistance as defined in their breakpoint tables.

eucast_rules(x, col_mo = NULL, info = TRUE, rules = c("breakpoints",
  "expert", "other", "all"), verbose = FALSE, ...)

Arguments

x

data with antibiotic columns, like e.g. AMX and AMC

col_mo

column name of the IDs of the microorganisms (see as.mo), defaults to the first column of class mo. Values will be coerced using as.mo.

info

print progress

rules

a character vector that specifies which rules should be applied - one or more of c("breakpoints", "expert", "other", "all")

verbose

a logical to turn Verbose mode on and off (default is off). In Verbose mode, the function does not apply rules to the data, but instead returns a data set in logbook form with extensive info about which rows and columns would be effected and in which way.

...

column name of an antibiotic, see section Antibiotics

Source

Value

The input of x, possibly with edited values of antibiotics. Or, if verbose = TRUE, a data.frame with all original and new values of the affected bug-drug combinations.

Details

Note: This function does not translate MIC values to RSI values. Use as.rsi for that.
Note: When ampicillin (AMP, J01CA01) is not available but amoxicillin (AMX, J01CA04) is, the latter will be used for all rules where there is a dependency on ampicillin. These drugs are interchangeable when it comes to expression of antimicrobial resistance.

The file containing all EUCAST rules is located here: https://gitlab.com/msberends/AMR/blob/master/data-raw/eucast_rules.tsv.

Antibiotics

To define antibiotics column names, leave as it is to determine it automatically with guess_ab_col or input a text (case-insensitive), or use NULL to skip a column (e.g. TIC = NULL to skip ticarcillin). Manually defined but non-existing columns will be skipped with a warning.

The following antibiotics are used for the functions eucast_rules and mdro. These are shown below in the format 'antimicrobial ID: name (ATC code)', sorted by name:

AMK: amikacin (J01GB06), AMX: amoxicillin (J01CA04), AMC: amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (J01CR02), AMP: ampicillin (J01CA01), AZM: azithromycin (J01FA10), AZL: azlocillin (J01CA09), ATM: aztreonam (J01DF01), CAP: capreomycin (J04AB30), RID: cefaloridine (J01DB02), CZO: cefazolin (J01DB04), FEP: cefepime (J01DE01), CTX: cefotaxime (J01DD01), FOX: cefoxitin (J01DC01), CED: cefradine (J01DB09), CAZ: ceftazidime (J01DD02), CRO: ceftriaxone (J01DD04), CXM: cefuroxime (J01DC02), CHL: chloramphenicol (J01BA01), CIP: ciprofloxacin (J01MA02), CLR: clarithromycin (J01FA09), CLI: clindamycin (J01FF01), COL: colistin (J01XB01), DAP: daptomycin (J01XX09), DOX: doxycycline (J01AA02), ETP: ertapenem (J01DH03), ERY: erythromycin (J01FA01), ETH: ethambutol (J04AK02), FLC: flucloxacillin (J01CF05), FOS: fosfomycin (J01XX01), FUS: fusidic acid (J01XC01), GAT: gatifloxacin (J01MA16), GEN: gentamicin (J01GB03), IPM: imipenem (J01DH51), INH: isoniazid (J04AC01), KAN: kanamycin (J01GB04), LVX: levofloxacin (J01MA12), LIN: lincomycin (J01FF02), LNZ: linezolid (J01XX08), MEM: meropenem (J01DH02), MTR: metronidazole (J01XD01), MEZ: mezlocillin (J01CA10), MNO: minocycline (J01AA08), MFX: moxifloxacin (J01MA14), NAL: nalidixic acid (J01MB02), NEO: neomycin (J01GB05), NET: netilmicin (J01GB07), NIT: nitrofurantoin (J01XE01), NOR: norfloxacin (J01MA06), NOV: novobiocin (an ATCvet code: QJ01XX95), OFX: ofloxacin (J01MA01), OXA: oxacillin (J01CF04), PEN: penicillin G (J01CE01), PIP: piperacillin (J01CA12), TZP: piperacillin/tazobactam (J01CR05), PLB: polymyxin B (J01XB02), PRI: pristinamycin (J01FG01), PZA: pyrazinamide (J04AK01), QDA: quinupristin/dalfopristin (J01FG02), RIB: rifabutin (J04AB04), RIF: rifampicin (J04AB02), RIF: rifampin (J04AB02), RFP: rifapentine (J04AB05), RXT: roxithromycin (J01FA06), SIS: sisomicin (J01GB08), TEC: teicoplanin (J01XA02), TCY: tetracycline (J01AA07), TIC: ticarcillin (J01CA13), TGC: tigecycline (J01AA12), TOB: tobramycin (J01GB01), TMP: trimethoprim (J01EA01), SXT: trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (J01EE01), VAN: vancomycin (J01XA01).

Read more on our website!

On our website https://msberends.gitlab.io/AMR you can find a tutorial about how to conduct AMR analysis, the complete documentation of all functions (which reads a lot easier than here in R) and an example analysis using WHONET data.

Examples

a <- 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",       # Penicillin G
                FOX = "S",       # Cefoxitin
                stringsAsFactors = FALSE)

a
#                       mo  VAN  AMX  COL  CAZ  CXM  PEN  FOX
# 1  Staphylococcus aureus    -    -    -    -    -    S    S
# 2  Enterococcus faecalis    -    -    -    -    -    S    S
# 3       Escherichia coli    -    -    -    -    -    S    S
# 4  Klebsiella pneumoniae    -    -    -    -    -    S    S
# 5 Pseudomonas aeruginosa    -    -    -    -    -    S    S


# apply EUCAST rules: 18 results are forced as R or S
b <- eucast_rules(a)

b
#                       mo  VAN  AMX  COL  CAZ  CXM  PEN  FOX
# 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


# \donttest{
# do not apply EUCAST rules, but rather get a data.frame
# with 18 rows, containing all details about the transformations:
c <- eucast_rules(a, verbose = TRUE)
# }