Use this function to determine the antiviral agent code of one or more antiviral agents. The data set antivirals will be searched for abbreviations, official names and synonyms (brand names).
Usage
as.av(x, flag_multiple_results = TRUE, info = interactive(), ...)
is.av(x)
Arguments
- x
a character vector to determine to antiviral agent ID
- flag_multiple_results
a logical to indicate whether a note should be printed to the console that probably more than one antiviral agent code or name can be retrieved from a single input value.
- info
a logical to indicate whether a progress bar should be printed, defaults to
TRUE
only in interactive mode- ...
arguments passed on to internal functions
Details
All entries in the antivirals data set have three different identifiers: a human readable EARS-Net code (column ab
, used by ECDC and WHONET), an ATC code (column atc
, used by WHO), and a CID code (column cid
, Compound ID, used by PubChem). The data set contains more than 5,000 official brand names from many different countries, as found in PubChem. Not that some drugs contain multiple ATC codes.
All these properties will be searched for the user input. The as.av()
can correct for different forms of misspelling:
Wrong spelling of drug names (such as "acyclovir"), which corrects for most audible similarities such as f/ph, x/ks, c/z/s, t/th, etc.
Too few or too many vowels or consonants
Switching two characters (such as "aycclovir", often the case in clinical data, when doctors typed too fast)
Digitalised paper records, leaving artefacts like 0/o/O (zero and O's), B/8, n/r, etc.
Use the av_*
functions to get properties based on the returned antiviral agent ID, see Examples.
Note: the as.av()
and av_*
functions may use very long regular expression to match brand names of antimicrobial agents. This may fail on some systems.
Source
World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology: https://www.whocc.no/atc_ddd_index/
European Commission Public Health PHARMACEUTICALS - COMMUNITY REGISTER: https://ec.europa.eu/health/documents/community-register/html/reg_hum_atc.htm
WHOCC
This package contains all ~550 antibiotic, antimycotic and antiviral drugs and their Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) codes, ATC groups and Defined Daily Dose (DDD) from the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology (WHOCC, https://www.whocc.no) and the Pharmaceuticals Community Register of the European Commission (https://ec.europa.eu/health/documents/community-register/html/reg_hum_atc.htm).
These have become the gold standard for international drug utilisation monitoring and research.
The WHOCC is located in Oslo at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and funded by the Norwegian government. The European Commission is the executive of the European Union and promotes its general interest.
NOTE: The WHOCC copyright does not allow use for commercial purposes, unlike any other info from this package. See https://www.whocc.no/copyright_disclaimer/.
Reference Data Publicly Available
All data sets in this AMR
package (about microorganisms, antibiotics, R/SI interpretation, EUCAST rules, etc.) are publicly and freely available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, SAS, 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.
See also
antivirals for the data.frame that is being used to determine ATCs
av_from_text()
for a function to retrieve antimicrobial drugs from clinical text (from health care records)
Examples
# these examples all return "ACI", the ID of aciclovir:
as.av("J05AB01")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("J 05 AB 01")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("Aciclovir")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("aciclo")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av(" aciclo 123")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("ACICL")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("ACI")
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("Virorax") # trade name
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("Zovirax") # trade name
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
as.av("acyklofir") # severe spelling error, yet works
#> Class 'av'
#> [1] ACI
# use av_* functions to get a specific properties (see ?av_property);
# they use as.av() internally:
av_name("J05AB01")
#> [1] "Aciclovir"
av_name("acicl")
#> [1] "Aciclovir"