Welcome to the AMR package.

Details

AMR is a free, open-source and independent R package to simplify the analysis and prediction of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) and to work with microbial and antimicrobial data and properties, by using evidence-based methods. Our aim is to provide a standard for clean and reproducible antimicrobial resistance data analysis, that can therefore empower epidemiological analyses to continuously enable surveillance and treatment evaluation in any setting.

After installing this package, R knows ~70,000 distinct microbial species and all ~550 antibiotic, antimycotic and antiviral drugs by name and code (including ATC, EARS-NET, LOINC and SNOMED CT), and knows all about valid R/SI and MIC values. It supports any data format, including WHONET/EARS-Net data.

This package is fully independent of any other R package and works on Windows, macOS and Linux with all versions of R since R-3.0.0 (April 2013). It was designed to work in any setting, including those with very limited resources. It was created for both routine data analysis and academic research at the Faculty of Medical Sciences of the University of Groningen, in collaboration with non-profit organisations Certe Medical Diagnostics and Advice and University Medical Center Groningen. This R package is actively maintained and free software; you can freely use and distribute it for both personal and commercial (but not patent) purposes under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPL-2), as published by the Free Software Foundation.

This package can be used for:

  • Reference for the taxonomy of microorganisms, since the package contains all microbial (sub)species from the Catalogue of Life and List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature

  • Interpreting raw MIC and disk diffusion values, based on the latest CLSI or EUCAST guidelines

  • Retrieving antimicrobial drug names, doses and forms of administration from clinical health care records

  • Determining first isolates to be used for AMR analysis

  • Calculating antimicrobial resistance

  • Determining multi-drug resistance (MDR) / multi-drug resistant organisms (MDRO)

  • Calculating (empirical) susceptibility of both mono therapy and combination therapies

  • Predicting future antimicrobial resistance using regression models

  • Getting properties for any microorganism (like Gram stain, species, genus or family)

  • Getting properties for any antibiotic (like name, code of EARS-Net/ATC/LOINC/PubChem, defined daily dose or trade name)

  • Plotting antimicrobial resistance

  • Applying EUCAST expert rules

  • Getting SNOMED codes of a microorganism, or getting properties of a microorganism based on a SNOMED code

  • Getting LOINC codes of an antibiotic, or getting properties of an antibiotic based on a LOINC code

  • Machine reading the EUCAST and CLSI guidelines from 2011-2020 to translate MIC values and disk diffusion diameters to R/SI

  • Principal component analysis for AMR

Read more on our website!

On our website https://msberends.github.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. As we would like to better understand the backgrounds and needs of our users, please participate in our survey!

Contact Us

For suggestions, comments or questions, please contact us at:

Matthijs S. Berends
m.s.berends [at] umcg [dot] nl
University of Groningen Department of Medical Microbiology University Medical Center Groningen
Post Office Box 30001
9700 RB Groningen
The Netherlands

If you have found a bug, please file a new issue at:
https://github.com/msberends/AMR/issues