This transforms a vector to a new class rsi, which is an ordered factor with levels S < I < R. Invalid antimicrobial interpretations will be translated as NA with a warning.

as.rsi(x)

is.rsi(x)

is.rsi.eligible(x, threshold = 0.05)

Arguments

x

vector

threshold

maximum fraction of x that is allowed to fail transformation, see Examples

Value

Ordered factor with new class rsi

Details

NOTE: This function does not translate MIC values to RSI values. If more than 50% of the input resembles MIC values, it will warn about this.
You can use eucast_rules to (1) apply inferred susceptibility and resistance based on results of other antibiotics and (2) apply intrinsic resistance based on taxonomic properties of a microorganism.

The function is.rsi.eligible returns TRUE when a columns contains only valid antimicrobial interpretations (S and/or I and/or R), and FALSE otherwise.

Read more on our website!

On our website https://msberends.gitlab.io/AMR you can find a comprehensive 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.

See also

Examples

# NOT RUN {
rsi_data <- as.rsi(c(rep("S", 474), rep("I", 36), rep("R", 370)))
rsi_data <- as.rsi(c(rep("S", 474), rep("I", 36), rep("R", 370), "A", "B", "C"))
is.rsi(rsi_data)

# this can also coerce combined MIC/RSI values:
as.rsi("<= 0.002; S") # will return S

plot(rsi_data)    # for percentages
barplot(rsi_data) # for frequencies
freq(rsi_data)    # frequency table with informative header

# using dplyr's mutate
library(dplyr)
septic_patients %>%
  mutate_at(vars(peni:rifa), as.rsi)


# fastest way to transform all columns with already valid AB results to class `rsi`:
septic_patients %>%
  mutate_if(is.rsi.eligible,
            as.rsi)

# default threshold of `is.rsi.eligible` is 5%.
is.rsi.eligible(WHONET$`First name`) # fails, >80% is invalid
is.rsi.eligible(WHONET$`First name`, threshold = 0.9) # succeeds
# }