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finalfit
makes it easy to export final results tables
and plots from RStudio to Microsoft Word and PDF.
Make sure you are on the most up-to-date version of finalfit.
install.packages("finalfit")
What follows is for demonstration purposes and is not meant to illustrate model building. We will ask, does a particular characteristic of a tumour (differentiation) predict 5-year survival?
First explore variable of interest (exposure) by making it the dependent.
library(finalfit)
library(dplyr)
= "differ.factor"
dependent
# Specify explanatory variables of interest
= c("age", "sex.factor",
explanatory "extent.factor", "obstruct.factor",
"nodes")
Note this useful alternative way of specifying explanatory variable lists:
%>%
colon_s select(age, sex.factor, extent.factor, obstruct.factor, nodes) %>%
names() -> explanatory
Check data.
%>%
colon_s ff_glimpse(dependent, explanatory)
#> $Continuous
#> label var_type n missing_n missing_percent mean sd min
#> age Age (years) <dbl> 929 0 0.0 59.8 11.9 18.0
#> nodes nodes <dbl> 911 18 1.9 3.7 3.6 0.0
#> quartile_25 median quartile_75 max
#> age 53.0 61.0 69.0 85.0
#> nodes 1.0 2.0 5.0 33.0
#>
#> $Categorical
#> label var_type n missing_n missing_percent
#> differ.factor Differentiation <fct> 906 23 2.5
#> sex.factor Sex <fct> 929 0 0.0
#> extent.factor Extent of spread <fct> 929 0 0.0
#> obstruct.factor Obstruction <fct> 908 21 2.3
#> levels_n
#> differ.factor 3
#> sex.factor 2
#> extent.factor 4
#> obstruct.factor 2
#> levels
#> differ.factor "Well", "Moderate", "Poor", "(Missing)"
#> sex.factor "Female", "Male", "(Missing)"
#> extent.factor "Submucosa", "Muscle", "Serosa", "Adjacent structures", "(Missing)"
#> obstruct.factor "No", "Yes", "(Missing)"
#> levels_count levels_percent
#> differ.factor 93, 663, 150, 23 10.0, 71.4, 16.1, 2.5
#> sex.factor 445, 484 48, 52
#> extent.factor 21, 106, 759, 43 2.3, 11.4, 81.7, 4.6
#> obstruct.factor 732, 176, 21 78.8, 18.9, 2.3
Look at associations between our exposure and other explanatory variables. Include missing data.
%>%
colon_s summary_factorlist(dependent, explanatory,
p=TRUE, na_include=TRUE)
label | levels | Well | Moderate | Poor | p |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age (years) | Mean (SD) | 60.2 (12.8) | 59.9 (11.7) | 59.0 (12.8) | 0.644 |
Sex | Female | 51 (54.8) | 314 (47.4) | 73 (48.7) | 0.400 |
Male | 42 (45.2) | 349 (52.6) | 77 (51.3) | ||
(Missing) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
Extent of spread | Submucosa | 5 (5.4) | 12 (1.8) | 3 (2.0) | 0.081 |
Muscle | 12 (12.9) | 78 (11.8) | 12 (8.0) | ||
Serosa | 76 (81.7) | 542 (81.7) | 127 (84.7) | ||
Adjacent structures | 0 (0.0) | 31 (4.7) | 8 (5.3) | ||
(Missing) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
Obstruction | No | 69 (74.2) | 531 (80.1) | 114 (76.0) | 0.655 |
Yes | 19 (20.4) | 122 (18.4) | 31 (20.7) | ||
(Missing) | 5 (5.4) | 10 (1.5) | 5 (3.3) | ||
nodes | Mean (SD) | 2.7 (2.2) | 3.6 (3.4) | 4.7 (4.4) | <0.001 |
Note missing data in obstruct.factor
. See a full
description of options in the forthcoming missing data vignette.
We will drop this variable for now. Also see that nodes has not been labelled. There are small numbers in some variables generating chisq.test warnings (predicted less than 5 in any cell). Generate final table.
= c("age", "sex.factor",
explanatory "extent.factor", "nodes")
%>%
colon_s mutate(
nodes = ff_label(nodes, "Lymph nodes involved")
%>%
) summary_factorlist(dependent, explanatory,
p=TRUE, na_include=TRUE,
add_dependent_label=TRUE) -> table 1
table1
Dependent: Differentiation | Well | Moderate | Poor | p | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age (years) | Mean (SD) | 60.2 (12.8) | 59.9 (11.7) | 59.0 (12.8) | 0.644 |
Sex | Female | 51 (54.8) | 314 (47.4) | 73 (48.7) | 0.400 |
Male | 42 (45.2) | 349 (52.6) | 77 (51.3) | ||
(Missing) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
Extent of spread | Submucosa | 5 (5.4) | 12 (1.8) | 3 (2.0) | 0.081 |
Muscle | 12 (12.9) | 78 (11.8) | 12 (8.0) | ||
Serosa | 76 (81.7) | 542 (81.7) | 127 (84.7) | ||
Adjacent structures | 0 (0.0) | 31 (4.7) | 8 (5.3) | ||
(Missing) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
Lymph nodes involved | Mean (SD) | 2.7 (2.2) | 3.6 (3.4) | 4.7 (4.4) | <0.001 |
Now examine explanatory variables against outcome. Check plot runs ok.
= c("age", "sex.factor",
explanatory "extent.factor", "nodes", "differ.factor")
= "mort_5yr"
dependent %>%
colon_s finalfit(dependent, explanatory,
dependent_label_prefix = "") -> table2
table2
Mortality 5 year | Alive | Died | OR (univariable) | OR (multivariable) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age (years) | Mean (SD) | 59.8 (11.4) | 59.9 (12.5) | 1.00 (0.99-1.01, p=0.986) | 1.01 (1.00-1.02, p=0.195) |
Sex | Female | 243 (55.6) | 194 (44.4) | - | - |
Male | 268 (56.1) | 210 (43.9) | 0.98 (0.76-1.27, p=0.889) | 0.98 (0.74-1.30, p=0.885) | |
Extent of spread | Submucosa | 16 (80.0) | 4 (20.0) | - | - |
Muscle | 78 (75.7) | 25 (24.3) | 1.28 (0.42-4.79, p=0.681) | 1.28 (0.37-5.92, p=0.722) | |
Serosa | 401 (53.5) | 349 (46.5) | 3.48 (1.26-12.24, p=0.027) | 3.13 (1.01-13.76, p=0.076) | |
Adjacent structures | 16 (38.1) | 26 (61.9) | 6.50 (1.98-25.93, p=0.004) | 6.04 (1.58-30.41, p=0.015) | |
nodes | Mean (SD) | 2.7 (2.4) | 4.9 (4.4) | 1.24 (1.18-1.30, p<0.001) | 1.23 (1.17-1.30, p<0.001) |
Differentiation | Well | 52 (56.5) | 40 (43.5) | - | - |
Moderate | 382 (58.7) | 269 (41.3) | 0.92 (0.59-1.43, p=0.694) | 0.70 (0.44-1.12, p=0.132) | |
Poor | 63 (42.3) | 86 (57.7) | 1.77 (1.05-3.01, p=0.032) | 1.08 (0.61-1.90, p=0.796) |
Important. In most R Markdown set-ups, environment objects require to be saved and loaded to R Markdown document.
# Save objects for knitr/markdown
save(table1, table2, dependent, explanatory, file = "out.rda")
We use RStudio Server Pro set-up on Ubuntu. But these instructions should work fine for most/all RStudio/Markdown default set-ups.
In RStudio, select File > New File > R Markdown.
A useful template file is produced by default. Try hitting knit to Word on the knitr button at the top of the .Rmd script window.
Now paste this into the file:
--- title: "Example knitr/R Markdown document" author: "Ewen Harrison" date: "22/5/2018" output: word_document: default ---
```{r setup, include=FALSE} # Load data into global environment. library(finalfit) library(dplyr) library(knitr) load("out.rda") ``` ## Table 1 - Demographics
```{r table1, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table1, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Table 2 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r table2, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table2, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Figure 1 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r figure1, echo = FALSE} colon_s %>% or_plot(dependent, explanatory)
Now, edit your Word file to create a new template. Click on a table.
The style should be compact
. Right click > Modify… >
font size = 9. Alter heading and text styles in the same way as desired.
Save this as template.docx
. Upload the file to your project
folder. Add this reference to the .Rmd YAML heading, as below. Make sure
you get the spacing correct.
The plot also doesn’t look quite right and it prints with warning messages. Experiment with fig.width to get it looking right.
Now paste this into your .Rmd file and run:
--- title: "Example knitr/R Markdown document" author: "Ewen Harrison" date: "21/5/2018" output: word_document: reference_docx: template.docx ---
```{r setup, include=FALSE} # Load data into global environment. library(finalfit) library(dplyr) library(knitr) load("out.rda") ``` ## Table 1 - Demographics
```{r table1, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table1, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Table 2 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r table2, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table2, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Figure 1 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r figure1, echo = FALSE, warning=FALSE, message=FALSE, fig.width=10} colon_s %>% or_plot(dependent, explanatory) ```
This is now looking good, and further tweaks can be made if you wish.
Default settings for PDF:
--- title: "Example knitr/R Markdown document" author: "Ewen Harrison" date: "21/5/2018" output: pdf_document: default ---
```{r setup, include=FALSE} # Load data into global environment. library(finalfit) library(dplyr) library(knitr) load("out.rda") ``` ## Table 1 - Demographics
```{r table1, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table1, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Table 2 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r table2, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table2, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r")) ``` ## Figure 1 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r figure1, echo = FALSE} colon_s %>% or_plot(dependent, explanatory) ```
Again, this is not bad, but has issues.
We can fix the plot in exactly the same way. But the table is off the side of the page. For this we use the ’kableExtra` package. Install this in the normal manner. You may also want to alter the margins of your page using geometry in the preamble.
--- title: "Example knitr/R Markdown document" author: "Ewen Harrison" date: "21/5/2018" output: pdf_document: default geometry: margin=0.75in ---
```{r setup, include=FALSE} # Load data into global environment. library(finalfit) library(dplyr) library(knitr) library(kableExtra) load("out.rda") ``` ## Table 1 - Demographics
```{r table1, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table1, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r"), booktabs=TRUE) ``` ## Table 2 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r table2, echo = FALSE, results='asis'} kable(table2, row.names=FALSE, align=c("l", "l", "r", "r", "r", "r"), booktabs=TRUE) %>% kable_styling(font_size=8) ``` ## Figure 1 - Association between tumour factors and 5 year mortality
```{r figure1, echo = FALSE, warning=FALSE, message=FALSE, fig.width=10} colon_s %>% or_plot(dependent, explanatory)
This is now looking pretty good for me as well.
There you have it. A pretty quick workflow to get final results into Word and a PDF.
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.