library(knitr) opts_chunk$set( echo = TRUE, results = 'asis', warning = FALSE, error = FALSE, message = FALSE, cache = FALSE, fig.width = 8, fig.height = 7, fig.path = "./figures_vignette/", fig.align = 'center') options(width = 170) options(warn = 1)#instead of warn = 0 by default -> to have place where warnings occur in the call to Sweave function
Utility functions are provided to create a standard clinical data review report. Please note that the examples in this section are only informative, and not evaluated in the vignette itself.
library(clinDataReview)
To create your clinical data review report, we advise to start from a skeleton of such report, via:
createClinDataReviewReportSkeleton()
This report is based on an example dataset (subset of the CDISC Pilot 01 dataset), available
in the clinUtils
package.
The report is created via:
render_clinDataReviewReport()
You can further tailor the report to your dataset(s) of interest and sections of interest.
See the next sections for further informations.
The input for the clinical data report consists of a set of Rmardown
files and a config
directory.
Rmd files
A set of Rmarkdown files in the working directory should be
index.Rmd file, containing the front page of the document.
This file should be formatted as a Rmarkdown report with YAML header, with
output
set to: clinDataReview::gitbook_clinDataReview_report
multiple Rmd files, one for each chapter (or template for multiple chapters). These files can be included in a R package.
Config files
There should be a config
directory containing:
a general configuration file: config.yml with:
pathDataFolder
: path to a directory containing input data in sas7bdat
or xpt formatpatientProfilesPath
(optional) : path to a directory that will contain
patient profiles (if they are created with the patientProfilesTemplate.Rmd
template report)study
(optional): study nameversion
(optional): data version, e.g. batcha configuration file for each chapter, as: config-[chapterName].yml.
This file should contain input parameters containing:
template
: filename of the Rmd file to consider for this chaptertemplatePackage
: name of the R package where the Rmd should be extracted from.inputDir
).clinDataReview
package, these include:reportTitle
: chapter title, used for section headerdataFileName
: filename of the dataset of interest for this chapter,
e.g.: 'adae.sas7bdat'reportTitleLevel
: integer with section level, e.g. 2params$
Please see the section Template reports for details on the template reports.
The clinical data report consists of a final report output and a set of intermediary results.
Final output
A final output folder ('report' by default) containing the:
extraDirs
parameter)Intermediary results
A folder of intermediary results ('interim' by default) containing:
template
/templatePackage
combination of the config file(s))knit_meta
object) and
session information required for each report partA set of template reports are available in the clinDataReview
package
itself.
The full list of the reports and the corresponding input parameters is
available at:
? `clinDataReview-templates`
(please note the backticks!).
To use a template available in the package for one of your report, your config
file should contain the corresponding name of the template via the template
tag and the templatePackage
set to 'clinDataReview'.
For example, to include a division in the report, your YAML config file should be formatted as:
```{js, eval = FALSE} template: divisionTemplate.Rmd templatePackage: clinDataReview reportTitle: "Title for a chapter" reportTitleLevel: 1
Please note that you can create your own template reports and store it in your custom R package (in a 'inst/template' folder). # Render a clinical data review report ## Production ### Create a report for production The function **`render_clinDataReviewReport` renders a clinical data report for production**. ```r clinDataReview::render_clinDataReviewReport()
The render_clinDataReviewReport
creates several html files, one per configuration file, split based on the split_by
parameter.
To open the full report, the user should open the introduction.html file.
In case a lot of different html chapters are created, a landing page can be created to guide the end-user to the opening of the report.
A convenient way to store all html files into one location, and have only one page to look for to open the report is the function:
clinDataReview::createRedirectPage()
This function:
The default names of the folder and landing page are report_dependencies and report.html. The names can be changed by the user.
When reports are to be deployed and displayed as webpages on SharePoint, the function:
clinDataReview::convertReportToAspx(reportDir = ".")
can be used to change all extensions and cross-links of all files within the reportDir to .aspx-format.
A dedicated functionality is available to zip the report and send it to colleagues within the team.
Once a report has been rendered, the user can call:
clinDataReview::zipClinDataReview()
This function zips the report, so that the analyses can be easily put as attachement in a mail/uploaded to a shared drive.
If the folder is not unzipped before opening the reports, a message in the browser reminds to unzip the documents.
Metadata can be added in the landing page, containing information concerning the data set creation time, the path to the original data etc.
A metadata file should be in yaml format.
The metadata function can be directly called in a Rmd documents with
clinDataReview::getMetadata()
To facilitate the creation of the report, a few utility functions & dedicated parameters are available.
In case the creation of the entire report is time-consuming, and only part(s) of
the report have been updated, it might be interesting to only re-run some parts
of the report. Config files associated to the parts of the report that should be
rerun can be specified via the configFiles
parameter.
# run one specific report clinDataReview::render_clinDataReviewReport(configFiles = "config-AE_timeprofile.yml") # only run the listings: clinDataReview::render_clinDataReviewReport(configFiles = list.files(pattern = "listing", "config"))
To convert all created Markdown files to HTML, the dedicated function
postProcessReport
can be used.
postProcessReport()
To debug a sub-report, it might be interesting to run only one specific R report in the current R session, with the parameters provided by the associated config file. This can be achieved as followed:
# get parameters from the general 'config.yml' and the specified config file params <- getParamsFromConfig(configFile = "config-AE_timeprofile.yml") # extract template from package if specified if(params$templatePackage == "clinDataReview"){ pathTemplate <- clinDataReview::getPathTemplate(file = params$template) file.copy(from = pathTemplate, to = ".") } # run a current chapter (without clinical data Js libraries) # Note that Js library to have the functionality to download patient profiles is not imported rmarkdown::render(input = params$template) # preview a specific chapter (with clinical data Js libraries) bookdown::render_book(input = params$template, preview = TRUE) # include the index file: bookdown::render_book(input = c("index.Rmd", params$template), preview = TRUE)
The creation of the report can be time-consuming for big clinical trial data.
The creation of the report is speed up via the use of the nCores
parameter.
If specified, the creation of the Markdown file corresponding to each config file,
and the creation of the HTML file for each (split) Markdown file are run in
parallel.
clinDataReview::render_clinDataReviewReport(nCores = 4)
The report can take some time to load in the browser for big clinical trial data.
The loading time can be improved by splitting the HTML page into smaller HTML pages,
via the split_by
parameter. This can be set at a level 7 of sectioning
(level 1 corresponds to a chapter), and for a specific part of the report,
corresponding to a specific config file.
```{js, eval = FALSE} template: plotTemplate.Rmd templatePackage: clinDataReview reportTitle: 'Laboratory profiles' reportTitleLevel: 2 split_by: 4 loopingVar: ["LBCAT", "LBTEST"]
_Example of config file with the use of the `split_by` parameter_ In the example above, the report contains a section titled: '2.1 Laboratory profiles' (level 2 of sectioning via the `reportTitleLevel` parameter), containing a subsection for each category of laboratory parameter (`LBCAT`) and a (nested) subsubsection for each laboratory test (`LBTEST`). For example, this report can contain the subsubsection: '2.1.1.1 Alanine Aminotransferase' with the laboratory profile for the Alanine Aminotransferase laboratory parameter. This chapter is split at level 4 of sectioning: [level 2 for the title + 2 levels for the `loopingVar` variables], so the subsubsections containing the content for a laboratory parameter are available in separate HTML pages. ### Optimize the report structure In case a lot of sections with interactive plots are created via the `loopingVar` parameter, the table of contents can be quite extensive. An alternative is to create a selection box (instead of a section) to select/filter the data of the plot based on grouping of a specific variable, via the `selectVars` parameter in the plotting function. # Appendix ## Session info ```r print(sessionInfo())
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