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Powerful biomarkers are important tools in diagnostic, clinical and research settings. In the area of diagnostic medicine, a biomarker is often used as a tool to identify subjects with a disease, or at high risk of developing a disease. Moreover, it can be used to foresee the more likely outcome of the disease, monitor its progression and predict the response to a given therapy. Diagnostic accuracy can be improved considerably by combining multiple markers, whose performance in identifying diseased subjects is usually assessed via receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. The CombiROC tool was originally designed as an easy to use R-Shiny web application to determine optimal combinations of markers from diverse complex omics data ( Mazzara et al. 2017 ); such an implementation is easy to use but has limited features and limitations arise from the machine it is deployed on. The CombiROC package is the natural evolution of the CombiROC tool and it allows the researcher/analyst to freely use the method and further build on it.
The aim of this document is to show the whole CombiROC workflow for biomarkers analysis to get you up and running as quickly as possible with this package. To do so we’re going to use the proteomic dataset from Zingaretti et al. 2012 containing multi-marker signatures for Autoimmune Hepatitis (AIH) for samples clinically diagnosed as “abnormal” (class A) or “normal” (class B). The scope of the workflow is to first find the markers combinations, then to assess their performance in classifying samples of the dataset.
Note: if you use CombiROC in your research, please cite:
Mazzara S., Rossi R.L., Grifantini R., Donizetti S., Abrignani L., Bombaci M. (2017) CombiROC: an interactive web tool for selecting accurate marker combinations of omics data. Scientific Reports, 7:45477. 10.1038/srep45477
The dataset to be analysed should be in text format, which can be separated by commas, tabs or semicolons. Format of the columns should be the following:
The load_data()
function uses a customized read.table() function that checks the conformity of the dataset format. If all the checks are passed, marker-related columns are reordered alphabetically, depending on marker names (this is necessary for a proper computation of combinations), and it imposes “Class” as the name of the second column. The loaded dataset is here assigned to the “data” object.
Please note that load_data()
takes the semicolumn (”;”) as default separator: if the dataset to be loaded has a different separator, i.e. a comma (”,”), is necessary to specify it in the argument sep
. The code below shows how to load a data set contained in the “data” folder (remember to adjust the path according to your current working directory).
First of all, load the package
library(combiroc)
Then load the data. To do so you can use the function load_data()
if you have a correctly formatted dataset ready:
data <- load_data("./data/demo_data.csv")
Now, we are going to use an AIH demo data set, that has been included in CombiROC package and can be directly called as demo_data
.
data <- demo_data
head(data)
## Patient.ID Class Marker1 Marker2 Marker3 Marker4 Marker5
## 1 AIH1 A 438 187 197 298 139
## 2 AIH2 A 345 293 134 523 335
## 3 AIH3 A 903 392 300 1253 0
## 4 AIH4 A 552 267 296 666 22
## 5 AIH5 A 1451 760 498 884 684
## 6 AIH6 A 497 260 175 640 572
NB: combiroc is able to deal with missing values both by removing the samples with NA values or imputing the values given the median signal of the class (see ?roc_reports() deal_NA parameter). combiroc is not meant to work with negative values. We recommend to preprocess the data in order to have for all the markers, and for all the sample, a numeric signal values higher or equal to 0 BEFORE using combiroc.
It is usually a good thing to visually explore your data with at least a few plots.
Box plots are a nice option to observe the distribution of measurements in each sample. The user can plot the data as she/he wishes using the preferred function: since data for CombiROC are required to be in wide (untidy) format, they cannot be plotted directly with the widely used ggplot()
function. Either the user is free to make the data longer (tidy) for the sole purpose of plotting, or the package’s combiroc_long()
function can be used for this purpose; this function wraps the tidyr::pivot_longer()
function, and it’s used to reshape the data in long format.
Data in long format are required for the plotting functions of the package and for any other Tidyverse-oriented applications.
The data object in the original wide format can be thus transformed into the reshaped long format data_long object, and further used.
data_long <- combiroc_long(data)
data_long
## # A tibble: 850 × 4
## Patient.ID Class Markers Values
## <chr> <chr> <chr> <int>
## 1 AIH1 A Marker1 438
## 2 AIH1 A Marker2 187
## 3 AIH1 A Marker3 197
## 4 AIH1 A Marker4 298
## 5 AIH1 A Marker5 139
## 6 AIH2 A Marker1 345
## 7 AIH2 A Marker2 293
## 8 AIH2 A Marker3 134
## 9 AIH2 A Marker4 523
## 10 AIH2 A Marker5 335
## # ℹ 840 more rows
Individual markers can also be explored retrieving a summary statistics and all individual scatter plots. To do so, the function single_markers_statistics()
can be used ingesting the dataframe data_long
in long format returned by combiroc_long()
.
sms <- single_markers_statistics(data_long)
The single_markers_statistics()
function returns a list on length 2, whose first element (sms[[1]]
) is a table with statistics for all markers in each class. The computed statistics are:
s_table <- sms[[1]]
s_table
## # A tibble: 10 × 11
## # Groups: Markers [5]
## Markers Class Mean Min Max Sd CV First_Quart. Median
## <chr> <chr> <dbl> <int> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
## 1 Marker1 A 1159. 52 8584 1672. 1.44 369. 569
## 2 Marker1 B 161. 0 1223 162. 1.01 59.5 111
## 3 Marker2 A 692. 41 3704 783. 1.13 259 422.
## 4 Marker2 B 141. 0 2142 205. 1.45 55.2 100.
## 5 Marker3 A 767. 0 13178 2436. 3.18 73.2 189
## 6 Marker3 B 56.2 0 640 80.6 1.43 10.2 33.5
## 7 Marker4 A 879. 105 3390 713. 0.811 371 620.
## 8 Marker4 B 467. 0 2464 406. 0.869 232 361
## 9 Marker5 A 571. 0 2757 582. 1.02 152. 518
## 10 Marker5 B 205. 0 4114 413. 2.02 17.2 76
## # ℹ 2 more variables: Third_Quart. <dbl>, Skewness <dbl>
While the second element is another list, containing dot plots, one for each marker. The individual plots can be called from the second element (sms[[2]]
) of the list with the $
operator. Here we display the plot for Marker 1:
plot_m1 <- sms[[2]]$Marker1
plot_m1
In the section “Code snippets” at the end of this vignette we suggest code snippets that can be used to customize the plots for individual markers across all samples, as well as to modify the summary statistics.
Since the target of the analysis is the identification of marker combinations capable to correctly classify samples, the user should first choose a signal threshold to define the positivity for a given marker/combination. This threshold should:
Usually this threshold is suggested by the guidelines of the kit used for the analysis (e.g. mean of buffer signal + n standard deviations). However, it is a good practice to always check the distribution of signal intensity of the dataset. To help the user with this operation, the markers_distribution()
function have been implemented generating a set of discoverable objects.
This function takes as input the data in long format ( data_long ), and returns a named list (here assigned to the distr object). Please note that the only required argument of markers_distributions()
function is case_class
, while other arguments have defaults: specific warnings are triggered with this command remembering the users the default threshold parameters that are in place during the computation.
distr <- markers_distribution(data_long, case_class = 'A',
y_lim = 0.0015, x_lim = 3000,
signalthr_prediction = TRUE,
min_SE = 40, min_SP = 80,
boxplot_lim = 2000)
## Warning in markers_distribution(data_long, case_class = "A", y_lim = 0.0015, :
## The suggested signal threshold in $Plot_density is the threshold with the
## highest Youden index of the signal thresholds at which SE>=min_SE and
## SP>=min_SP. This is ONLY a suggestion. Please check if signal threshold is
## suggested by your analysis kit guidelines instead, and remember to check
## $Plot_density to better judge our suggested threshold by inspecting the 2
## distributions.
The distr object contains the following elements:
Once the markers_distributions()
function is run, all the above elements can be plotted or displayed individually. Let’s see each one of them
The Boxplot shows the distribution of each marker values for both classes:
distr$Boxplot
The ROC curve shows how many real positive samples would be found positive (sensitivity, or SE) and how many real negative samples would be found negative (specificity, or SP) in function of signal threshold. Please note that the False Positive Rate (i.e. 1 - specificity) is plotted on the x-axis. These SE and SP are refereed to the signal intensity threshold considering all the markers together; they are not the SE and SP of a single marker/combination computed by the ’combi()` function further discussed in the Combinatorial analyisis, sensitivity and specificity paragraph.
distr$ROC
The Coord is a dataframe that contains the coordinates of the above described “ROC” (threshold, SP and SE) that have at least a minimun SE (min_SE) and a minimum SP (min_SP): this two threshold are set by default at min_SE = 0
and min_SP = 0
, but they can be set manually by specifying different values as shown in the example. The Youden index is also computed: this is the Youden’s J statistic capturing the performance of a dichotomous diagnostic test, with higher values for better performance ( \(J = SE + SP -1\)).
head(distr$Coord, n=10)
## threshold specificity sensitivity Youden
## 240 319.5 80 65 0.4500000
## 241 320.5 80 65 0.4515385
## 242 322.0 80 65 0.4530769
## 243 325.0 80 65 0.4546154
## 244 327.5 81 65 0.4561538
## 245 328.5 81 65 0.4576923
## 246 329.5 81 64 0.4526923
## 247 331.0 81 64 0.4426923
## 248 332.5 81 64 0.4488462
## 249 334.0 82 64 0.4503846
The Density_plot shows the distribution of the signal intensity values for both the classes. In addition, the function allows the user to set both the y_lim and x_lim values to provide a better visualization.
One important feature of the density plot is that it calculates a possible signal intensity threshold: in case of lack of a priori knowedge of the threshold the user can set the argument signalthr_prediction = TRUE
in the markers_distribution()
function. In this way the function calculates a “suggested signal threshold” that corresponds to the signal threshold value associated to the highest Youden index (in Coord), at which SE and SP are greater or equal to their set minimal values (min_SE and min_SP). This threshold is added to the “Density_plot” object as a dashed black line and a number. The use of the Youden index allows to pick a threshold with the best SE/SP setting, but it is recommended to always inspect “Coord” and choose the most appropriate signal threshold by considering SP, SE and Youden index.
This suggested signal threshold can be used as signalthr argument of the combi()
function further in the workflow.
distr$Density_plot
Finally, the Density_summary displays a few summary statistics of the density plot.
distr$Density_summary
## # A tibble: 2 × 9
## Class n.observations Min Max Median Mean `1st Q` `3rd Q` SD
## <chr> <int> <int> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
## 1 A 200 0 13178 461 814. 233. 825 1427.
## 2 B 650 0 4114 106 206. 38 266 318.
combi()
function works on the dataset initially loaded. It computes the marker combinations and counts their corresponding positive samples for each class (once thresholds are selected). A sample, to be considered positive for a given combination, must have a value higher than a given signal threshold (signalthr) for at least a given number of markers composing that combination (combithr).
As mentioned before, signalthr
should be set depending on the guidelines and characteristics of the methodology used for the analysis or by an accurate inspection of signal intensity distribution. In case of lack of specific guidelines, one should set the value signalthr
as suggested by the distr$Density_plot
as described in the previous section.
In this vignette signalthr
is set at 450 while combithr
is set at 1. We are setting this at 450 (instead of 328.5 as suggested by the distr$Density_plot
) in order to reproduce the results reported in Mazzara et. al 2017 (the original CombiROC paper) or in Bombaci & Rossi 2019 as well as in the tutorial of the web app with default thresholds.
combithr
, instead, should be set exclusively depending on the needed stringency: 1 is the less stringent and most common choice (meaning that at least one marker in a combination needs to reach the threshold).
Once all the combinations are computed, the function calculates:
SE of is calculated dividing the number of detected positive samples for case class by the total sample of case class (% of positive “A” samples).
SP of control class (“B”) is calculated by subtracting the percentage of positive samples for control class in the total sample of control class to 100 (100 - % of positive “B” samples).
NB: with max_length
is possible to set the maximum number of markers allowed to compose a combination (in the example the computed combinations will be composed at most by 3 markers instead of 5). This parameter can be very useful in case of a huge number of markers (e.g. >20) in order to drastically reduce the number of possible combinations, making the calculation computationally more manageable by removing the longest ones (less important from the diagnostic point of view).
The obtained tab object is a dataframe of all the combinations obtained with the chosen parameters, the obtained value of SE, SP and number of markers.
tab <- combi(data, signalthr = 450, combithr = 1, case_class='A', max_length = 3)
head(tab, n=20)
## Markers #Positives A #Positives B SE SP
## Marker1 Marker1 26 6 65.0 95.38462
## Marker2 Marker2 19 2 47.5 98.46154
## Marker3 Marker3 8 1 20.0 99.23077
## Marker4 Marker4 26 48 65.0 63.07692
## Marker5 Marker5 23 15 57.5 88.46154
## Combination 1 Marker1-Marker2 29 6 72.5 95.38462
## Combination 2 Marker1-Marker3 29 6 72.5 95.38462
## Combination 3 Marker1-Marker4 31 52 77.5 60.00000
## Combination 4 Marker1-Marker5 30 21 75.0 83.84615
## Combination 5 Marker2-Marker3 21 2 52.5 98.46154
## Combination 6 Marker2-Marker4 32 50 80.0 61.53846
## Combination 7 Marker2-Marker5 28 17 70.0 86.92308
## Combination 8 Marker3-Marker4 29 49 72.5 62.30769
## Combination 9 Marker3-Marker5 27 16 67.5 87.69231
## Combination 10 Marker4-Marker5 31 53 77.5 59.23077
## Combination 11 Marker1-Marker2-Marker3 31 6 77.5 95.38462
## Combination 12 Marker1-Marker2-Marker4 34 52 85.0 60.00000
## Combination 13 Marker1-Marker2-Marker5 33 21 82.5 83.84615
## Combination 14 Marker1-Marker3-Marker4 34 52 85.0 60.00000
## Combination 15 Marker1-Marker3-Marker5 33 21 82.5 83.84615
## n_markers
## Marker1 1
## Marker2 1
## Marker3 1
## Marker4 1
## Marker5 1
## Combination 1 2
## Combination 2 2
## Combination 3 2
## Combination 4 2
## Combination 5 2
## Combination 6 2
## Combination 7 2
## Combination 8 2
## Combination 9 2
## Combination 10 2
## Combination 11 3
## Combination 12 3
## Combination 13 3
## Combination 14 3
## Combination 15 3
The markers combinations can now be ranked and selected. After specifying the case class (“A” in this case), the function ranked_combs()
ranks the combinations by the Youden index in order to show the combinations with the highest SE (of cases) and SP (of controls) on the top, facilitating the user in the selection of the best ones. Again, the Youden index (J) is calculated in this way:
$$
J = SE+SP-1
$$
The user can also set (not mandatory) a minimal value of SE and/or SP that a combination must have to be selected, i.e. to be considered as “gold” combinations.
A possibility to overview how single markers and all combinations are distributed in the SE - SP ballpark is to plot them with the bubble chart code suggested in the Additional Tips&Tricks section (see: Bubble plot of all combinations) starting from the tab
dataframe obtained with the combi()
function (see above).
The bigger the bubble, the more markers are in the combination: looking at the size and distribution of bubbles across SE and SP values is useful to anticipate how effective will be the combinations in the ranking. Setting no cutoffs (i.e. SE = 0 and SP = 0), all single markers and combinations (all bubbles) will be considered as “gold” combinations and ranked in the next passage.
In the the example below the minimal values of SE and SP are set, respectively, to 40 and 80, in order to reproduce the gold combinations selection reported in Mazzara et. al 2017. The obtained values of combinations, ranked according to Youden index, are stored in the “ranked markers” rmks
object containing the table
dataframe and the bubble_chart
plot that can be accessed individually with the $
operator.
rmks <- ranked_combs(tab, min_SE = 40, min_SP = 80)
rmks$table
## Markers #Positives A #Positives B SE SP
## Combination 11 Marker1-Marker2-Marker3 31 6 77.5 95.38462
## Combination 1 Marker1-Marker2 29 6 72.5 95.38462
## Combination 2 Marker1-Marker3 29 6 72.5 95.38462
## Combination 13 Marker1-Marker2-Marker5 33 21 82.5 83.84615
## Combination 15 Marker1-Marker3-Marker5 33 21 82.5 83.84615
## Combination 18 Marker2-Marker3-Marker5 30 17 75.0 86.92308
## Marker1 Marker1 26 6 65.0 95.38462
## Combination 4 Marker1-Marker5 30 21 75.0 83.84615
## Combination 7 Marker2-Marker5 28 17 70.0 86.92308
## Combination 9 Marker3-Marker5 27 16 67.5 87.69231
## Combination 5 Marker2-Marker3 21 2 52.5 98.46154
## Marker2 Marker2 19 2 47.5 98.46154
## Marker5 Marker5 23 15 57.5 88.46154
## n_markers Youden
## Combination 11 3 0.7288462
## Combination 1 2 0.6788462
## Combination 2 2 0.6788462
## Combination 13 3 0.6634615
## Combination 15 3 0.6634615
## Combination 18 3 0.6192308
## Marker1 1 0.6038462
## Combination 4 2 0.5884615
## Combination 7 2 0.5692308
## Combination 9 2 0.5519231
## Combination 5 2 0.5096154
## Marker2 1 0.4596154
## Marker5 1 0.4596154
as mentioned, the rmks
object also has a slot for the bubble_chart
plot, that can be recalled with the usual $
operator. This plot discriminates between combinations not passing the SE and SP cutoffs as set in ranked_combs()
(blue bubbles) and “gold” combinations passing them (yellow bubbles).
rmks$bubble_chart
To allow an objective comparison of combinations, the function roc_reports()
applies the Generalised Linear Model (stats::glm()
with argument family= binomial
) for each gold combination. The resulting predictions are then used to compute ROC curves (with function pROC::roc()
) and their corresponding metrics which are both returned by the function as a named list object (in this case called reports). The function roc_reports()
requires as input:
load_data()
;combi()
.In addition, the user has to specify the class case, and the single markers and/or the combinations that she/he wants to be displayed with the specific function’s arguments.
In the example below a single marker ( Marker1 ) and two combinations (combinations number 11 and 15 ) were choosen.
reports <-roc_reports(data, markers_table = tab,
case_class = 'A',
single_markers =c('Marker1'),
selected_combinations = c(11,15))
The obtained reports object contains 3 items that can be accessed using the $
operator:
reports$Plot
reports$Metrics
## AUC SE SP CutOff ACC TN TP FN FP NPV PPV
## Marker1 0.910 0.90 0.808 0.219 0.829 105 36 4 25 0.963 0.590
## Combination 11 0.942 0.95 0.869 0.216 0.888 113 38 2 17 0.983 0.691
## Combination 15 0.935 0.90 0.854 0.248 0.865 111 36 4 19 0.965 0.655
reports$Models
## $Marker1
##
## Call: glm(formula = fla, family = "binomial", data = data)
##
## Coefficients:
## (Intercept) log(Marker1 + 1)
## -13.775 2.246
##
## Degrees of Freedom: 169 Total (i.e. Null); 168 Residual
## Null Deviance: 185.5
## Residual Deviance: 101.7 AIC: 105.7
##
## $`Combination 11`
##
## Call: glm(formula = fla, family = "binomial", data = data)
##
## Coefficients:
## (Intercept) log(Marker1 + 1) log(Marker2 + 1) log(Marker3 + 1)
## -17.0128 1.5378 0.9176 0.5706
##
## Degrees of Freedom: 169 Total (i.e. Null); 166 Residual
## Null Deviance: 185.5
## Residual Deviance: 87.49 AIC: 95.49
##
## $`Combination 15`
##
## Call: glm(formula = fla, family = "binomial", data = data)
##
## Coefficients:
## (Intercept) log(Marker1 + 1) log(Marker3 + 1) log(Marker5 + 1)
## -16.0554 1.9595 0.6032 0.2805
##
## Degrees of Freedom: 169 Total (i.e. Null); 166 Residual
## Null Deviance: 185.5
## Residual Deviance: 87.95 AIC: 95.95
For a bit deeper discussion on how to interpret the results, this section will be focused on a single specific combination in the dataset seen so far: “Combination 11”, combining Marker1, Marker2 and Marker3. This combination has an optimal cutoff equal to 0.216 (see the CutOff column in reports$Metrics
).
The following is the regression equation being used by the Generalized Linear Model (glm) function to compute the predictions:
$$ f(x)=β_0+β_1x_1+β_2x_2+ β_3x_3 +…+β_nx_n $$
Where \(β_n\) are the coefficients (being \(β_0\) the intercept) determined by the model and \(x_n\) the variables.
While, the predicted probabilities have been calculated with the sigmoid function:
$$
p(x) = \frac{\mathrm{1} }{\mathrm{1} + e^{-f(x)} }
$$
In accordance with the above, the predictions for “Combination 11” have been computed using the coefficients displayed as in reports$Models
(see previous paragraph), and this combination’s prediction equation will be:
$$ f(x)= -17.0128 + 1.5378 *log(Marker1 + 1) + 0.9176 log(Marker2 + 1) + 0.5706 log(Marker3 + 1) $$
As for the predict method for a Generalized Linear Model, predictions are produced on the scale of the additive predictors. Predictions ($f(x)$ values) of Combination 11 can be visualized using the commmand glm::predict
with argument type = "link"
:
head(predict(reports$Models$`Combination 11`, type='link')) # link = f(x)
## 1 2 3 4 5 6
## 0.166224681 -0.008125528 2.192603482 1.077910194 3.816098810 0.593971602
Prediction probabilities ($p(x)$ values, i.e. predictions on the scale of the response) of Combination 11 can be instead visualized using argument type = "response"
:
head(predict(reports$Models$`Combination 11`, type='response')) # response = p(x)
## 1 2 3 4 5 6
## 0.5414607 0.4979686 0.8995833 0.7460983 0.9784606 0.6442759
Finally, the comparison between the prediction probability and the optimal cutoff (here 0.216, see the CutOff column for Classification 11 in reports$Metrics
) determines the classification of each sample by following this rule:
$$ C(x) = \begin{cases} 1 & {p}(x) > opt. cutoff \ 0 & {p}(x) \leq opt.cutoff \end{cases} $$
Specifically, for “Combination 11”:
Thus, using 0.216 as cutoff, Combination 11 is able to classify the samples in the dataset with a SE equal to 95.0%, SP equal to 86.9%, and accuracy equal to 88.8% (see ROC curves, reports$Metrics
).
A new feature of the CombiROC package (not present in the CombiROC tool Shiny app), offers the possibility to exploit the models obtained with roc_reports()
for each selected marker/combination (and assigned to reports$Models
) to directly classify new samples that are not labelled, i.e. not assigned to any case or control classes.
The unclassified data set must be similar to the data set used for the previous combinatorial analysis ( i.e. of the same nature and with the same markers, but obviously without the ‘Class’ column).
To load datasets with unclassified samples labelled_data
in load_data()
function must be set to FALSE. In this way the function loads the same kind of files and it performs the same format checks shown above, with the exception of the Class column which is not present in an unclassified datasets and thus not checked.
For purely demonstrative purposes, in the following example a “synthetic” unclassified data set (‘data/unclassified_proteomic_data.csv’) was used: it was obtained by randomly picking 20 samples from the already classified data set (the data). The loaded unclassified sample is here assigned to the unc_data object.
Please note that this unclassified data set lacks the “Class” column but has a Patient.ID column which actually allows the identification of the class but sample names here are not used in the workflow and have labeling purposes to check the prediction outcomes (a “no” prefix identifies healthy/normal subjects while the absence of the prefix identifies affected/abnormal subjects).
unc_data <- load_data(data = './data/demo_unclassified_data.csv', sep = ',', labelled_data = F)
This very same dataset has been included in CombiROC package as an unclassified demo dataset, which can be directly called typing demo_unclassified_data
.
head(demo_unclassified_data)
## Patient.ID Marker1 Marker2 Marker3 Marker4 Marker5
## 1 AIH33 1964 875 404 1883 1021
## 2 no AIH126 381 303 4 266 376
## 3 AIH12 261 153 528 449 237
## 4 no AIH112 144 155 25 600 0
## 5 no AIH41 0 193 50 382 135
## 6 no AIH38 46 51 24 342 74
The prediction of the class can be achieved with combi_score()
: by setting classify
=TRUE, this function applies the models previously calculated on a classified data set working as training dataset, to the unclassified dataset and classifies the samples accordingly to the prediction probability and optimal cutoff as shown in the Under the hood section.
This combi_score()
function takes as inputs:
unc_data
);reports$Models
that have been previously computed by roc_reports()
(reports$Models);roc_reports()
(reports$Metrics).The user can set the labels of the predicted class (setting Positive_class
and Negative_class
), otherwise they will be 1 for positive samples and 0 for the negative samples by default (see the rule shown in the end of the Results explanation section). Here we are setting Positive_class = "affected"
and Negative_class = "healthy"
The function returns a data.frame (cl_data
in the example below), whose columns contain the predicted class for each sample according to the models used (originally in reports$Models
); here we are still using Marker1, Combination 11 and Combination 15.
unc_data <- demo_unclassified_data
cl_data <- combi_score(unc_data,
Models = reports$Models,
Metrics = reports$Metrics,
Positive_class = "abnormal",
Negative_class = "normal",
classify = TRUE)
As can be observed comparing the outcome in the dataframe with the tag on samples’ names, the single marker Marker1 is not 100% efficient in correctly predicting the class (see mismatch in second row, where the normal sample “no AIH126” is classified as abnormal by Marker1); instead, both Combination 11 and 15 correctly assign it to the right class.
cl_data
## ID Marker1 Combination 11 Combination 15
## 1 AIH33 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 2 no AIH126 abnormal normal normal
## 3 AIH12 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 4 no AIH112 normal normal normal
## 5 no AIH41 normal normal normal
## 6 no AIH38 normal normal normal
## 7 AIH4 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 8 no AIH32 normal normal normal
## 9 AIH20 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 10 no AIH13 normal normal normal
## 11 no AIH11 normal normal normal
## 12 no AIH114 normal normal normal
## 13 no AIH121 normal normal normal
## 14 AIH17 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 15 AIH14 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 16 no AIH106 normal normal normal
## 17 no AIH67 normal normal normal
## 18 AIH9 abnormal abnormal abnormal
## 19 no AIH74 normal normal normal
## 20 AIH16 abnormal abnormal abnormal
Thus, each column of the prediction dataframe contains the prediction outcome of a given model and, along with the samples names (in the index column), can be accessed with the $ operator as usual:
cl_data$index
## NULL
cl_data$`Combination 11`
## [1] "abnormal" "normal" "abnormal" "normal" "normal" "normal"
## [7] "abnormal" "normal" "abnormal" "normal" "normal" "normal"
## [13] "normal" "abnormal" "abnormal" "normal" "normal" "abnormal"
## [19] "normal" "abnormal"
In addition, by setting classify
=FALSE, combi_score()
can be exploited to easily retrieve the predicted probabilities of each combination (p(x) a.k.a ‘combi score’) in unclassified datasets.
unc_data <- demo_unclassified_data
cs_data <- combi_score(unc_data,
Models = reports$Models,
Metrics = reports$Metrics,
Positive_class = "abnormal",
Negative_class = "normal",
classify = FALSE)
cs_data
## ID Marker1 Combination 11 Combination 15
## 1 AIH33 9.629030e-01 9.864991e-01 9.875017e-01
## 2 no AIH126 3.960193e-01 1.537155e-01 1.455281e-01
## 3 AIH12 2.194324e-01 4.378589e-01 5.432861e-01
## 4 no AIH112 6.928584e-02 5.381403e-02 1.289242e-02
## 5 no AIH41 1.041071e-06 4.840652e-05 4.525821e-06
## 6 no AIH38 5.893585e-03 3.576392e-03 4.687486e-03
## 7 AIH4 6.007967e-01 7.460983e-01 6.533166e-01
## 8 no AIH32 2.799238e-02 9.912527e-03 1.635574e-02
## 9 AIH20 4.661915e-01 5.588462e-01 6.067799e-01
## 10 no AIH13 1.041071e-06 4.087306e-08 2.534146e-07
## 11 no AIH11 1.041071e-06 3.153259e-06 3.309952e-07
## 12 no AIH114 1.664621e-01 8.160105e-02 9.545823e-02
## 13 no AIH121 2.799238e-02 9.247089e-02 3.612256e-02
## 14 AIH17 9.985976e-01 9.999299e-01 9.999348e-01
## 15 AIH14 5.455001e-01 6.805223e-01 7.390291e-01
## 16 no AIH106 4.001370e-02 1.099469e-02 1.870649e-02
## 17 no AIH67 1.616676e-02 6.082032e-04 1.604146e-03
## 18 AIH9 5.869070e-01 8.034081e-01 8.027712e-01
## 19 no AIH74 1.041071e-06 1.425832e-06 1.064701e-07
## 20 AIH16 9.973708e-01 9.999000e-01 9.998317e-01
show_markers()
returns a data frame containing the composition of each combination of interest. It requires as input one or more combinations (only their numbers), and the table with combinations and corresponding positive samples counts (“tab”, obtained with combi()
).
show_markers(selected_combinations =c(11,15), markers_table = tab)
## Combination Composing_markers
## 1 Combination 11 Marker1-Marker2-Marker3
## 2 Combination 15 Marker1-Marker3-Marker5
combs_with()
returns the combinations containing all the markers of interest. It requires as input one or more single marker, and the table with combinations and corresponding positive samples counts (“tab”, obtained with combi()
). The list with the combinations containing all the markers is assigned to “combs_list” object.
combs_list <- combs_with(markers=c('Marker1', 'Marker3'), markers_table = tab)
## The combinations in which you can find ALL the selected markers have been computed
combs_list
## [1] 2 11 14 15
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Session Info for this vignette:
sessionInfo()
## R version 4.3.1 (2023-06-16 ucrt)
## Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
## Running under: Windows 11 x64 (build 22000)
##
## Matrix products: default
##
##
## locale:
## [1] LC_COLLATE=C
## [2] LC_CTYPE=English_United Kingdom.utf8
## [3] LC_MONETARY=English_United Kingdom.utf8
## [4] LC_NUMERIC=C
## [5] LC_TIME=English_United Kingdom.utf8
##
## time zone: Europe/Rome
## tzcode source: internal
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] combiroc_0.3.4
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] vctrs_0.6.2 cli_3.6.1 knitr_1.43 rlang_1.1.1
## [5] xfun_0.39 highr_0.10 stringi_1.7.12 png_0.1-8
## [9] purrr_1.0.1 generics_0.1.3 gtools_3.9.4 labeling_0.4.2
## [13] glue_1.6.2 colorspace_2.1-0 plyr_1.8.8 scales_1.2.1
## [17] fansi_1.0.4 grid_4.3.1 evaluate_0.21 munsell_0.5.0
## [21] tibble_3.2.1 lifecycle_1.0.3 stringr_1.5.0 compiler_4.3.1
## [25] dplyr_1.1.2 Rcpp_1.0.10 pkgconfig_2.0.3 tidyr_1.3.0
## [29] rstudioapi_0.14 farver_2.1.1 R6_2.5.1 pROC_1.18.2
## [33] tidyselect_1.2.0 utf8_1.2.3 pillar_1.9.0 moments_0.14.1
## [37] magrittr_2.0.3 withr_2.5.0 tools_4.3.1 gtable_0.3.3
## [41] ggplot2_3.4.2
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.