hbl_summary | R Documentation |
Summarize a fitted model in a table.
hbl_summary(
mcmc,
data,
response = "response",
response_type = "raw",
study = "study",
study_reference = max(data[[study]]),
group = "group",
group_reference = min(data[[group]]),
patient = "patient",
rep = "rep",
rep_reference = min(data[[rep]]),
covariates = grep("^covariate", colnames(data), value = TRUE),
constraint = FALSE,
eoi = 0,
direction = "<"
)
mcmc |
A wide data frame of posterior samples returned by
|
data |
Tidy data frame with one row per patient per rep, indicator columns for the response variable, study, group, patient, rep, and covariates. All columns must be atomic vectors (e.g. not lists). |
response |
Character of length 1,
name of the column in |
response_type |
Character of length 1: |
study |
Character of length 1,
name of the column in |
study_reference |
Atomic of length 1,
element of the |
group |
Character of length 1,
name of the column in |
group_reference |
Atomic of length 1,
element of the |
patient |
Character of length 1,
name of the column in |
rep |
Character of length 1,
name of the column in |
rep_reference |
Atomic of length 1,
element of the |
covariates |
Character vector of column names
in Each baseline covariate column must truly be a baseline covariate: elements must be equal for all time points within each patient (after the steps in the "Data processing" section). In other words, covariates must not be time-varying. A large number of covariates, or a large number of levels in a categorical covariate, can severely slow down the computation. Please consider carefully if you really need to include such complicated baseline covariates. |
constraint |
Logical of length 1, whether to pool all study arms at baseline (first rep). Appropriate when the response is the raw response (as opposed to change from baseline) and the first rep (i.e. time point) is prior to treatment. |
eoi |
Numeric of length at least 1, vector of effects of interest (EOIs) for critical success factors (CSFs). |
direction |
Character of length |
The hb_summary()
function post-processes the results from
the model. It estimates marginal means of the response,
treatment effect, and other quantities of interest.
A tidy data frame with one row per group (e.g. treatment arm) and the columns in the following list. Unless otherwise specified, the quantities are calculated at the group-by-rep level. Some are calculated for the current (non-historical) study only, while others pertain to the combined dataset which includes all historical studies.
group
: group index.
group_label
: original group label in the data.
rep
: rep index.
rep_label
: original rep label in the data.
data_mean
: observed mean of the response specific to the current
study.
data_sd
: observed standard deviation of the response
specific to the current study.
data_lower
: lower bound of a simple frequentist 95% confidence
interval of the observed data mean specific to the current study.
data_upper
: upper bound of a simple frequentist 95% confidence
interval of the observed data mean specific to the current study.
data_n
: number of non-missing observations in the combined dataset
(all studies).
data_N
: total number of observations (missing and non-missing)
in the combined dataset (all studies).
data_n_study_*
: number of non-missing observations in each study.
The suffixes of these column names are integer study indexes.
Call dplyr::distinct(hbl_data(your_data), study, study_label)
to see which study labels correspond to these integer indexes.
data_N_study_*
: total number of observations
(missing and non-missing) within each study.
The suffixes of these column names are integer study indexes.
Call dplyr::distinct(hbl_data(your_data), study, study_label)
to see which study labels correspond to these integer indexes.
response_mean
: Estimated posterior mean of the response
from the model. (Here, the response variable in the data
should be a change from baseline outcome.)
Specific to the current study.
response_sd
: Estimated posterior standard deviation of the mean
response from the model.
Specific to the current study.
response_variance
: Estimated posterior variance of the mean
response from the model.
Specific to the current study.
response_lower
: Lower bound of a 95% posterior interval on the mean
response from the model.
Specific to the current study.
response_upper
: Upper bound of a 95% posterior interval on the mean
response from the model.
Specific to the current study.
response_mean_mcse
: Monte Carlo standard error of response_mean
.
response_sd_mcse
: Monte Carlo standard error of response_sd
.
response_lower_mcse
: Monte Carlo standard error of response_lower
.
response_upper_mcse
: Monte Carlo standard error of response_upper
.
change_*
: same as the response_*
columns, but for change
from baseline instead of the response. Not included if response_type
is "change"
because in that case the response is already
change from baseline.
change_percent_*
: same as the change_*
columns, but for the
percent change from baseline (from 0% to 100%).
Not included if response_type
is "change"
because in that case the response is already
change from baseline.
Specific to the current study.
diff_*
: same as the response_*
columns, but for treatment effect.
P(diff > EOI)
, P(diff < EOI)
: CSF probabilities on the
treatment effect specified with the eoi
and direction
arguments.
Specific to the current study.
effect_mean
: same as the response_*
columns, but for the effect size
(diff / residual standard deviation).
Specific to the current study.
precision_ratio*
: same as the response_*
columns,
but for the precision ratio, which compares within-study variance
to among-study variance. Only returned for the hierarchical model.
Specific to the current study.
Other summary:
hbl_ess()
if (!identical(Sys.getenv("HBL_TEST", unset = ""), "")) {
set.seed(0)
data <- hbl_sim_pool(
n_study = 2,
n_group = 2,
n_patient = 5,
n_rep = 3
)$data
tmp <- utils::capture.output(
suppressWarnings(
mcmc <- hbl_mcmc_hierarchical(
data,
chains = 1,
warmup = 10,
iter = 20,
seed = 0
)
)
)
hbl_summary(mcmc, data)
}
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