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The {cardx} package is an extension of the {cards} package, providing additional functions to create Analysis Results Data Objects (ARDs) using the R programming language. The {cardx} package exports ARD functions that uses utility functions from {cards} and statistical functions from additional packages (such as, {stats}, {mmrm}, {emmeans}, {car}, {survey}, etc.) to construct summary objects.
Summary objects can be used to:
Generate Tables and visualizations for Regulatory Submission easily in R. Perfect for presenting descriptive statistics, statistical analyses, regressions, etc. and more.
Conduct Quality Control checks on existing Tables in R. Storing both the results and test parameters supports the re-use and verification of data analyses.
Install cards from CRAN with:
install.packages("cardx")You can install the development version of cards from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("insightsengineering/cardx")Example t-test:
library(cardx)
cards::ADSL |>
  # keep two treatment arms for the t-test calculation
  dplyr::filter(ARM %in% c("Placebo", "Xanomeline High Dose")) |>
  cardx::ard_stats_t_test(by = ARM, variable = AGE)## {cards} data frame: 14 x 9
##    group1 variable   context   stat_name stat_label      stat
## 1     ARM      AGE stats_t_…    estimate  Mean Dif…     0.828
## 2     ARM      AGE stats_t_…   estimate1  Group 1 …    75.209
## 3     ARM      AGE stats_t_…   estimate2  Group 2 …    74.381
## 4     ARM      AGE stats_t_…   statistic  t Statis…     0.655
## 5     ARM      AGE stats_t_…     p.value    p-value     0.513
## 6     ARM      AGE stats_t_…   parameter  Degrees …   167.362
## 7     ARM      AGE stats_t_…    conf.low  CI Lower…    -1.668
## 8     ARM      AGE stats_t_…   conf.high  CI Upper…     3.324
## 9     ARM      AGE stats_t_…      method     method Welch Tw…
## 10    ARM      AGE stats_t_… alternative  alternat… two.sided
## 11    ARM      AGE stats_t_…          mu    H0 Mean         0
## 12    ARM      AGE stats_t_…      paired  Paired t…     FALSE
## 13    ARM      AGE stats_t_…   var.equal  Equal Va…     FALSE
## 14    ARM      AGE stats_t_…  conf.level  CI Confi…      0.95
## ℹ 3 more variables: fmt_fun, warning, errorNote that the returned ARD contains the analysis results in addition to the function parameters used to calculate the results allowing for reproducible future analyses and further customization.
Some {cardx} functions accept regression model objects as input:
lm(AGE ~ ARM, data = cards::ADSL) |>
  ard_aod_wald_test()Note that the Analysis Results Standard should begin with a data set rather than a model object. To accomplish this we include model construction helpers.
construct_model(
  data = cards::ADSL,
  formula = reformulate2("ARM", response = "AGE"),
  method = "lm"
) |>
  ard_aod_wald_test()## {cards} data frame: 6 x 8
##      variable   context stat_name stat_label     stat fmt_fun
## 1 (Intercept) aod_wald…        df  Degrees …        1       1
## 2 (Intercept) aod_wald… statistic  Statistic 7126.713       1
## 3 (Intercept) aod_wald…   p.value    p-value        0       1
## 4         ARM aod_wald…        df  Degrees …        2       1
## 5         ARM aod_wald… statistic  Statistic    1.046       1
## 6         ARM aod_wald…   p.value    p-value    0.593       1
## ℹ 2 more variables: warning, errorThe {cardx} package exports functions to create ARDs based on various
statistical methods; methods that are primarily implemented in other
packages. {cardx} does not take a hard dependency on these packages,
meaning that these packages are not typically installed when {cardx} is
installed from CRAN. As a result, {renv} will not record these packages
in its lock.file unless there is a direct reference to the
underlying statistical package in your code. For example, if you pass a
regression model to ard_emmeans_mean_difference(), there is
no direct reference to the {emmeans} package in your script and {renv}
will not record the package.
One can circumvent this issue by including some kind of reference to the package in your code. Below are are couple of common ways to do so.
library(emmeans)Attaching a package with library() is great for its
simplicity, but you may not want to attach a package if it’s not
necessary.
invisible(emmeans::emmeans)You can invisibly print a function from the package. Printing a function does not have an effect on your environment (which is great), but it is somewhat more difficult to read. (This is my preferred method.)
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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