Descriptive Statistic Layers

Descriptive statistics in ‘Tplyr’ are created using group_desc() function when creating a layer. While group_desc() allows you to set your target, by variables, and filter criteria, a great deal of the control of the layer comes from set_format_strings() where the actual summaries are declared.

tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AGE, by = "Age (years)", where= SAFFL=="Y") %>% 
      set_format_strings(
        "n"        = f_str("xx", n),
        "Mean (SD)"= f_str("xx.x (xx.xx)", mean, sd),
        "Median"   = f_str("xx.x", median),
        "Q1, Q3"   = f_str("xx, xx", q1, q3),
        "Min, Max" = f_str("xx, xx", min, max),
        "Missing"  = f_str("xx", missing)
      )
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1 ord_layer_2
Age (years) n 86 84 84 1 1 1
Age (years) Mean (SD) 75.2 ( 8.59) 74.4 ( 7.89) 75.7 ( 8.29) 1 1 2
Age (years) Median 76.0 76.0 77.5 1 1 3
Age (years) Q1, Q3 69, 82 71, 80 71, 82 1 1 4
Age (years) Min, Max 52, 89 56, 88 51, 88 1 1 5
Age (years) Missing 0 0 0 1 1 6

Let’s walk through this call to set_format_strings to understand in detail what’s going on:

  1. The quoted strings on the left of the ‘=’ within set_format_strings() become the row label in the output. This allows you to define some custom text in set_format_strings() to explain the summary that is presented on the associated row. This text is fully in your control.
  2. On the right side of each equals is a call to f_str(). As explained in the vignette("Tplyr"), this is an object that captures a lot of metadata to understand how the strings should be presented.
  3. Within the f_str() call, you see x’s in quotes. This defines how you’d like the numbers formatted from the resulting summaries. The number of x’s you use on the left side of a decimal control the space allotted for an integer, and the right side controls the decimal precision. Decimals are rounded prior to string formatting - so no need to worry about that. Note that this forcefully sets the decimal and integer precision - ‘Tplyr’ can automatically determine this for you as well, but more on that later.
  4. After the x’s there are unquoted variable names. This is where you specify the actual summaries that will be performed. Notice that some f_str() calls have two summaries specified. This allows you to put two summaries in the same string and present them on the same line.

But where do these summary names come from? And which ones does ‘Tplyr’ have?

Built-in Summaries

We’ve built a number of default summaries into ‘Tplyr’, which allows you to perform these summaries without having to specify the functions to calculate them yourself. The summaries built in to ‘Tplyr’ are listed below. In the second column are the names that you would use within an f_str() call to use them. In the third column, we have the syntax used to make the function call.

Statistic Variable Names Function Call
N n n()
Mean mean mean(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Standard Deviation sd sd(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Median median median(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Variance variance var(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Minimum min min(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Maximum max max(.var, na.rm=TRUE)
Interquartile Range iqr IQR(.var, na.rm=TRUE, type=getOption(‘tplyr.quantile_type’)
Q1 q1 quantile(.var, na.rm=TRUE, type=getOption(‘tplyr.quantile_type’))[[2]]
Q3 q3 quantile(.var, na.rm=TRUE, type=getOption(‘tplyr.quantile_type’))[[4]]
Missing missing sum(is.na(.var))

Notes About Built-in’s

Note that the only non-default option being used in any of the function calls above is na.rm=TRUE. For most of the functions, this is likely fine - but with IQR, Q1, and Q3 note that there are several different quantile algorithms available in R. The default we chose to use is the R default of Type 7:

\[ m = 1-p. p[k] = (k - 1) / (n - 1). \textrm{In this case, } p[k] = mode[F(x[k])]. \textrm{This is used by S.} \] That said, we still want to offer some flexibility here, so you can change the quantile algorithm by switching the tplyr.quantile_type option. If you’re intending to match the SAS definition, you can use Type 3. For more information, see the stats::quantile() documentation.

The example below demonstrates using the default quantile algorithm in R.

tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(CUMDOSE) %>% 
      set_format_strings("Q1, Q3" = f_str('xxxxx, xxxxx', q1, q3))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>%
  select(-starts_with("ord")) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose
Q1, Q3 0, 0 2646, 13959 1984, 9801

This next example demonstrates using quantile algorithm Type 3, which matches the SAS definition of:

\[ \textrm{Nearest even order statistic. γ = 0 if g = 0 and j is even, and 1 otherwise.} \]

options(tplyr.quantile_type = 3)
tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(CUMDOSE) %>% 
      set_format_strings("Q1, Q3" = f_str('xxxxx, xxxxx', q1, q3))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
    select(-starts_with("ord")) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose
Q1, Q3 0, 0 2565, 13959 1944, 9774

It’s up to you to determine which algorithm you should use - but we found it necessary to provide you with the flexibility to change this within the default summaries.

But what if ‘Tplyr’ doesn’t offer you the summaries that you need?

Custom Summaries

We understand that our defaults may not cover every descriptive statistic that you’d like to see. That’s why we’ve opened to door to creating custom summaries. Custom summaries allow you to provide any function you’d like into a desc layer. You can focus on the derivation and how to calculate the number you want to see. ‘Tplyr’ can consume this function, and use all the existing tools within ‘Tplyr’ to produce the string formatted result alongside any of the default summaries we provide as well.

Custom summaries may be provided in two ways:

As with any other setting in ‘Tplyr’, the layer setting will always take precedence over any other setting.

Let’s look at an example.

tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>%
  add_layer(
    group_desc(vars(AGE, HEIGHTBL), by = "Sepal Length") %>%
      set_custom_summaries(
        geometric_mean = exp(sum(log(.var[.var > 0]), na.rm=TRUE) / length(.var))
      ) %>%
      set_format_strings(
        'Geometric Mean (SD)' = f_str('xx.xx (xx.xxx)', geometric_mean, sd)
      )
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  select(-starts_with("ord")) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose var2_Placebo var2_Xanomeline High Dose var2_Xanomeline Low Dose
Sepal Length Geometric Mean (SD) 74.70 ( 8.590) 73.94 ( 7.886) 75.18 ( 8.286) 162.17 (11.522) 165.51 (10.131) 163.11 (10.419)

Here, a few important things are demonstrated:

Another note about custom summaries is that you’re able to overwrite the default summaries built into ‘Tplyr’ as well. Don’t like the default summary functions that we provide? Use the tplyr.custom_summaries option to overwrite them in your session, and add any new ones that you would like to include.

For example, here we use the ‘Tplyr’ default mean.

tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AGE) %>% 
      set_format_strings("Mean" = f_str('xx.xx', mean))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1
Mean 75.21 74.38 75.67 1 1

But now, let’s overwrite mean using a custom summary. Let’s use a trimmed mean instead, taking 20% of observations off of both ends.

options(tplyr.custom_summaries = 
          rlang::quos(
            mean = mean(.var, na.rm=TRUE, trim=0.4)
          )
        )

tplyr_table(adsl, TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AGE) %>% 
      set_format_strings("Mean" = f_str('xx.xx', mean))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1
Mean 76.28 75.94 77.44 1 1

Note that the table code used to produce the output is the same. Now ‘Tplyr’ used the custom summary function for mean as specified in the tplyr.custom_summaries option. Also note the use of rlang::quos(). We’ve done our best to mask this from the user everywhere possible and make the interfaces clean and intuitive, but a great deal of ‘Tplyr’ is built using ‘rlang’ and non-standard evaluation. Within this option is one of the very few instances where a user needs to concern themselves with the use of quosures. If you’d like to learn more about non-standard evaluation and quosures, we recommend Section IV in Advanced R.

Formatting

A lot of the nuance to formatting descriptive statistics layers has already been covered above, but there are a couple more tricks to getting the most out of ‘Tplyr’. One of these tricks is filling empty values.

By default, if there is no available value for a summary in a particular observation, the result being presented will be blanked out.

adlb_2 <- adlb %>% 
  filter(TRTA != "Placebo")

tplyr_table(adlb_2, TRTA) %>% 
  set_pop_data(adsl) %>% 
  set_pop_treat_var(TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AVAL, by=PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings('Mean (SD)' = f_str('xxx (xxx)', mean, sd))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  head() %>% 
  select(-starts_with("ord")) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose
BUN Mean (SD) 5 ( 1) 6 ( 3)
CA Mean (SD) 2 ( 0) 2 ( 0)
CK Mean (SD) 64 ( 94) 58 ( 78)
GGT Mean (SD) 17 ( 49) 21 ( 27)
URATE Mean (SD) 271 ( 88) 231 ( 87)

Note how the entire example above has all records in var1_Placebo missing. ‘Tplyr’ gives you control over how you fill this space. Let’s say that we wanted instead to make that space say “Missing”. You can control this with the f_str() object using the empty parameter

adlb_2 <- adlb %>% 
  filter(TRTA != "Placebo")

tplyr_table(adlb_2, TRTA) %>% 
  set_pop_data(adsl) %>% 
  set_pop_treat_var(TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AVAL, by=PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings('Mean (SD)' = f_str('xxx.xx (xxx.xxx)', mean, sd, empty=c(.overall="MISSING")))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  head() %>% 
  select(-starts_with("ord")) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose
BUN Mean (SD) 4.57 ( 1.301) 5.71 ( 2.940)
CA Mean (SD) 2.19 ( 0.137) 2.15 ( 0.083)
CK Mean (SD) 64.25 ( 93.986) 58.33 ( 77.915)
GGT Mean (SD) 16.75 ( 48.692) 21.33 ( 26.989)
URATE Mean (SD) 271.23 ( 88.161) 230.98 ( 87.006)

Look at the empty parameter above. Here, we use a named character vector, where the name is .overall. When this name is used, if all elements within the cell are missing, they will be filled with the specified text. Otherwise, the provided string will fill just the missing parameter. In some cases, this may not be what you’d like to see. Perhaps we want a string that fills each missing space.

adlb_2 <- adlb %>% 
  filter(TRTA != "Placebo")

tplyr_table(adlb_2, TRTA) %>% 
  set_pop_data(adsl) %>% 
  set_pop_treat_var(TRT01P) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AVAL, by=PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings('Mean (SD)' = f_str('xxx.xx (xxx.xxx)', mean, sd, empty=c("NA")))
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  head() %>%
  select(-starts_with("ord")) %>%
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose
BUN Mean (SD) 4.57 ( 1.301) 5.71 ( 2.940)
CA Mean (SD) 2.19 ( 0.137) 2.15 ( 0.083)
CK Mean (SD) 64.25 ( 93.986) 58.33 ( 77.915)
GGT Mean (SD) 16.75 ( 48.692) 21.33 ( 26.989)
URATE Mean (SD) 271.23 ( 88.161) 230.98 ( 87.006)

In the example above, instead of filling the whole space, the empty text of “NA” replaces the empty value for each element. So for ‘Mean (SD)’, we now have ‘NA ( NA)’. Note that the proper padding was still used for ‘NA’ to make sure the parentheses still align with populated records.

Auto Precision

You may have noticed that the approach to formatting covered so far leaves a lot to be desired. Consider analyzing lab results, where you may want precision to vary based on the collected precision of the tests. Furthermore, depending on the summary being presented, you may wish to increase the precision further. For example, you may want the mean to be at collected precision +1 decimal place, and for standard deviation +2.

‘Tplyr’ has this covered using auto-precision. Auto-precision allows you to format your numeric summaries based on the precision of the data collected. This has all been built into the format strings, because a natural place to specify your desired format is where you specify how you want your data presented. If you wish to use auto-precision, use a instead of x when creating your summaries. Note that only one a is needed on each side of a decimal. To use increased precision, use a+n where n is the number of additional spaces you wish to add.


tplyr_table(adlb, TRTA) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AVAL, by = PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings(
        'Mean (SD)' = f_str('a.a+1 (a.a+2)', mean, sd)
      )
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  head(20) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1 ord_layer_2
BUN Mean (SD) 4.7430 ( 2.05463) 4.5696 ( 1.30148) 5.7120 ( 2.94018) 1 1 1
CA Mean (SD) 2.165660 (0.0692494) 2.189362 (0.1372011) 2.145700 (0.0830867) 1 2 1
CK Mean (SD) 72.4 ( 288.41) 64.2 ( 93.99) 58.3 ( 77.91) 1 3 1
GGT Mean (SD) 17.8 ( 34.77) 16.8 ( 48.69) 21.3 ( 26.99) 1 4 1
URATE Mean (SD) 235.9373 ( 83.69662) 271.2288 ( 88.16093) 230.9807 ( 87.00646) 1 5 1

As you can see, the decimal precision is now varying depending on the test being performed. Notice that both the integer and the decimal side of each number fluctuate as well. Tpylr collects both the integer and decimal precision, and you can specify both separately. For example, you could use x’s to specify a default number of spaces for your integers that are used consistently across by variables, but vary the decimal precision based on collected data. You can also increment the number of spaces for both integer and decimal separately.

But - this is kind of ugly, isn’t it? Do we really need all 6 decimal places collected for CA? For this reason, you’re able to set a cap on the precision that’s displayed:

tplyr_table(adlb, TRTA) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(AVAL, by = PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings(
        'Mean (SD)' = f_str('a.a+1 (a.a+2)', mean, sd),
        cap = c(int=3, dec=2)
      )
  ) %>% 
  build() %>% 
  head(20) %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1 ord_layer_2
BUN Mean (SD) 4.743 ( 2.0546) 4.570 ( 1.3015) 5.712 ( 2.9402) 1 1 1
CA Mean (SD) 2.166 (0.0692) 2.189 (0.1372) 2.146 (0.0831) 1 2 1
CK Mean (SD) 72.4 (288.41) 64.2 ( 93.99) 58.3 ( 77.91) 1 3 1
GGT Mean (SD) 17.8 ( 34.77) 16.8 ( 48.69) 21.3 ( 26.99) 1 4 1
URATE Mean (SD) 235.937 ( 83.6966) 271.229 ( 88.1609) 230.981 ( 87.0065) 1 5 1

Now that looks better. The cap argument is part of set_format_strings(). You need to specify the integer and decimal caps separately. Note that integer precision works slightly differently than decimal precision. Integer precision relates to the length allotted for the left side of a decimal, but integers will not truncate. When using ‘x’ formatting, if an integer exceeds the set length, it will push the number over. If the integer side of auto-precision is not capped, the necessary length for an integer in the associated by group will be as long as necessary. Decimals, on the other hand, round to the specified length. These caps apply to the length allotted for the “a” on either the integer or the decimal. So for example, if the decimal length is capped at 2 and the selected precision is “a+1”, then 3 decimal places will be allotted.

This was a basic situation, but if you’re paying close attention, you may have some questions. What if you have more by variables, like by visit AND test. Do we then calculate precision by visit and test? What if collected precision is different per visit and we don’t want that? What about multiple summary variables? How do we determine precision then? We have modifier functions for this:

tplyr_table(adlb, TRTA) %>% 
  add_layer(
    group_desc(vars(AVAL, CHG, BASE), by = PARAMCD) %>% 
      set_format_strings(
        'Mean (SD)' = f_str('a.a+1 (a.a+2)', mean, sd, empty="NA"),
        cap = c(int=3, dec=2)
      ) %>% 
      set_precision_on(AVAL) %>% 
      set_precision_by(PARAMCD)
  ) %>%
  build() %>% 
  head() %>% 
  kable()
row_label1 row_label2 var1_Placebo var1_Xanomeline High Dose var1_Xanomeline Low Dose var2_Placebo var2_Xanomeline High Dose var2_Xanomeline Low Dose var3_Placebo var3_Xanomeline High Dose var3_Xanomeline Low Dose ord_layer_index ord_layer_1 ord_layer_2
BUN Mean (SD) 4.743 ( 2.0546) 4.570 ( 1.3015) 5.712 ( 2.9402) -0.765 ( 1.6734) -0.428 ( 1.5910) -0.428 ( 1.3299) 5.457 ( 1.5661) 4.712 ( 1.6382) 6.497 ( 2.7940) 1 1 1
CA Mean (SD) 2.166 (0.0692) 2.189 (0.1372) 2.146 (0.0831) -0.105 (0.0972) -0.100 (0.1242) -0.141 (0.0621) 2.290 (0.0923) 2.289 (0.0828) 2.304 (0.0719) 1 2 1
CK Mean (SD) 72.4 (288.41) 64.2 ( 93.99) 58.3 ( 77.91) -3.9 (275.75) -15.2 ( 77.56) -14.7 ( 51.54) 83.4 ( 38.13) 84.8 ( 64.27) 72.3 ( 35.71) 1 3 1
GGT Mean (SD) 17.8 ( 34.77) 16.8 ( 48.69) 21.3 ( 26.99) -1.2 ( 21.67) -1.5 ( 41.48) -0.3 ( 20.55) 24.2 ( 19.36) 18.8 ( 25.84) 22.7 ( 11.05) 1 4 1
URATE Mean (SD) 235.937 ( 83.6966) 271.229 ( 88.1609) 230.981 ( 87.0065) -23.792 ( 37.1799) -28.550 ( 55.6673) -40.645 ( 24.7959) 272.617 ( 65.7021) 310.486 ( 61.8285) 273.608 ( 86.9470) 1 5 1

Three variables are being summarized here - AVAL, CHG, and BASE. So which should be used for precision? set_precision_on() allows you to specify this, where the precision_on() variable must be one of the variables within target_var. Similarly, set_precision_by() changes the by variables used to determine collected precision. If no precision_on() variable is specified, the first variable in target_var is used. If no precision_by() variables are specified, then the default by variables are used.