The broom.helpers
package offers a suite of functions
that make easy to interact, add information, and manipulate tibbles
created with broom::tidy()
(and friends).
The suite includes functions to group regression model terms by variable, insert reference and header rows for categorical variables, add variable labels, and more.
As a motivating example, let’s summarize a logistic regression model with a forest plot and in a table.
To begin, let’s load our packages.
library(broom.helpers)
library(gtsummary)
library(ggplot2)
library(dplyr)
# paged_table() was introduced only in rmarkdwon v1.2
<- function(tab) {
print_table if (packageVersion("rmarkdown") >= 1.2) {
::paged_table(tab)
rmarkdownelse {
} ::kable(tab)
knitr
} }
Our model predicts tumor response using chemotherapy treatment and tumor grade. The data set we’re utilizing has already labelled the columns using the labelled package. The column labels will be carried through to our figure and table.
<- glm(response ~ trt + grade, trial, family = binomial)
model_logit ::tidy(model_logit)
broom#> # A tibble: 4 x 5
#> term estimate std.error statistic p.value
#> <chr> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 (Intercept) -0.879 0.305 -2.88 0.00400
#> 2 trtDrug B 0.194 0.311 0.625 0.532
#> 3 gradeII -0.0647 0.381 -0.170 0.865
#> 4 gradeIII 0.0822 0.376 0.219 0.827
To create the figure, we’ll need to add some information to the tidy
tibble, i.e. we’ll need to group the terms that belong to the same
variable, add the reference row, etc. Parsing this information can be
difficult, but the broom.helper
package has made it
simple.
<-
tidy_forest %>%
model_logit # perform initial tidying of the model
tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
# adding in the reference row for categorical variables
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
# adding a reference value to appear in plot
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows() %>%
# adding the variable labels
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
# removing intercept estimate from model
tidy_remove_intercept()
tidy_forest#> # A tibble: 5 x 16
#> term variable var_label var_class var_type var_nlevels contrasts
#> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <int> <chr>
#> 1 trtDrug A trt Chemotherapy Trea~ character dichoto~ 2 contr.tr~
#> 2 trtDrug B trt Chemotherapy Trea~ character dichoto~ 2 contr.tr~
#> 3 gradeI grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> 4 gradeII grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> 5 gradeIII grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> # ... with 9 more variables: contrasts_type <chr>, reference_row <lgl>,
#> # label <chr>, estimate <dbl>, std.error <dbl>, statistic <dbl>,
#> # p.value <dbl>, conf.low <dbl>, conf.high <dbl>
Note: we used tidy_and_attach()
instead
of broom::tidy()
. broom.helpers
functions
needs a copy of the original model. To avoid passing the model at each
step, the easier way is to attach the model as an attribute of the
tibble with tidy_attach_model()
.
tidy_and_attach()
is simply a shortcut of
model %>% broom::tidy() %>% tidy_and_attach(model)
.
We now have a tibble with every piece of information we need to
create our forest plot using ggplot2
.
%>%
tidy_forest mutate(
plot_label = paste(var_label, label, sep = ":") %>%
::fct_inorder() %>%
forcats::fct_rev()
forcats%>%
) ggplot(aes(x = plot_label, y = estimate, ymin = conf.low, ymax = conf.high, color = variable)) +
geom_hline(yintercept = 1, linetype = 2) +
geom_pointrange() +
coord_flip() +
theme(legend.position = "none") +
labs(
y = "Odds Ratio",
x = " ",
title = "Forest Plot using broom.helpers"
)
Note:: for more advanced and nicely formatted plots
of model coefficients, look at GGally::ggcoef_model()
and
its dedicated
vignette. GGally::ggcoef_model()
internally uses
broom.helpers
.
In addition to aiding in figure creation, the broom.helpers package can help summarize a model in a table. In the example below, we add header and reference rows, and utilize existing variable labels. Let’s change the labels shown in our summary table as well.
<-
tidy_table %>%
model_logit # perform initial tidying of the model
tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
# adding in the reference row for categorical variables
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
# adding the variable labels
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
# add header row
tidy_add_header_rows() %>%
# removing intercept estimate from model
tidy_remove_intercept()
# print summary table
options(knitr.kable.NA = '')
%>%
tidy_table # format model estimates
select(label, estimate, conf.low, conf.high, p.value) %>%
mutate(across(all_of(c("estimate", "conf.low", "conf.high")), style_ratio)) %>%
mutate(across(p.value, style_pvalue)) %>%
print_table()
Note:: for more advanced and nicely formatted tables
of model coefficients, look at gtsummary::tbl_regression()
and its dedicated
vignette. gtsummary::tbl_regression()
internally uses
broom.helpers
.
There is also a handy wrapper, called tidy_plus_plus()
,
for the most commonly used tidy_*()
functions, and they can
be executed with a single line of code:
%>%
model_logit tidy_plus_plus(exponentiate = TRUE)
#> # A tibble: 5 x 18
#> term variable var_label var_class var_type var_nlevels contrasts
#> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <int> <chr>
#> 1 trtDrug A trt Chemotherapy Trea~ character dichoto~ 2 contr.tr~
#> 2 trtDrug B trt Chemotherapy Trea~ character dichoto~ 2 contr.tr~
#> 3 gradeI grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> 4 gradeII grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> 5 gradeIII grade Grade factor categor~ 3 contr.tr~
#> # ... with 11 more variables: contrasts_type <chr>, reference_row <lgl>,
#> # label <chr>, n_obs <dbl>, n_event <dbl>, estimate <dbl>, std.error <dbl>,
#> # statistic <dbl>, p.value <dbl>, conf.low <dbl>, conf.high <dbl>
%>%
model_logit tidy_plus_plus(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
print_table()
See the documentation of tidy_plus_plus()
for the full
list of available options.
broom.helpers
can also handle different contrasts for
categorical variables and the use of polynomial terms for continuous
variables.
When polynomial terms of a continuous variable are defined with
stats::poly()
, broom.helpers
will be able to
identify the corresponding variable, create appropriate labels and add
header rows.
<- glm(response ~ poly(age, 3) + ttdeath, na.omit(trial), family = binomial)
model_poly
%>%
model_poly tidy_plus_plus(
exponentiate = TRUE,
add_header_rows = TRUE,
variable_labels = c(age = "Age in years")
%>%
) print_table()
By default, categorical variables are coded with a treatment
contrasts (see stats::contr.treatment()
). With such
contrasts, model coefficients correspond to the effect of a modality
compared with the reference modality (by default, the first one).
tidy_add_reference_rows()
allows to add a row for this
reference modality and
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows()
will populate the
estimate value of these references rows by 0 (or 1 if
exponentiate = TRUE
). tidy_add_term_labels()
is able to retrieve the label of the factor level associated with a
specific model term.
<- glm(
model_1 ~ stage + grade * trt,
response ::trial,
gtsummaryfamily = binomial
)
%>%
model_1 tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
print_table()
Using stats::contr.treatment()
, it is possible to
defined alternative reference rows. It will be properly managed by
broom.helpers
.
<- glm(
model_2 ~ stage + grade * trt,
response ::trial,
gtsummaryfamily = binomial,
contrasts = list(
stage = contr.treatment(4, base = 3),
grade = contr.treatment(3, base = 2),
trt = contr.treatment(2, base = 2)
)
)
%>%
model_2 tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
print_table()
You can also use sum contrasts (cf. stats::contr.sum()
).
In that case, each model coefficient corresponds to the difference of
that modality with the grand mean. A variable with 4 modalities will be
coded with 3 terms. However, a value could be computed (using
emmeans::emmeans()
) for the last modality, corresponding to
the difference of that modality with the grand mean and equal to sum of
all other coefficients multiplied by -1. broom.helpers
will
identify categorical variables coded with sum contrasts and could
retrieve an estimate value for the reference term.
<- glm(
model_3 ~ stage + grade * trt,
response ::trial,
gtsummaryfamily = binomial,
contrasts = list(
stage = contr.sum,
grade = contr.sum,
trt = contr.sum
)
)
%>%
model_3 tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
print_table()
Other types of contrasts exist, like Helmert
(contr.helmert()
) or polynomial
(contr.poly()
). They are more complex as a modality will be
coded with a combination of terms. Therefore, for such contrasts, it
will not be possible to associate a specific model term with a level of
the original factor. broom.helpers
will not add a reference
term in such case.
<- glm(
model_4 ~ stage + grade * trt,
response ::trial,
gtsummaryfamily = binomial,
contrasts = list(
stage = contr.poly,
grade = contr.helmert,
trt = contr.poly
)
)
%>%
model_4 tidy_and_attach(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_reference_rows() %>%
tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows(exponentiate = TRUE) %>%
tidy_add_term_labels() %>%
print_table()
Below is a summary of the additional columns that may be added by a
broom.helpers
function. The table includes the column name,
the function that adds the column, and a short description of the
information in the column.
Column | Function | Description |
---|---|---|
original_term |
|
Original term before disambiguation. This columns is added only when disambiguation is needed (i.e. for mixed models). |
variable |
|
String of variable names from the model. For categorical variables and polynomial terms defined with |
var_class |
|
Class of the variable. |
var_type |
|
One of 'intercept', 'continuous', 'dichotomous', 'categorical', 'interaction', 'ran_pars' or 'ran_vals' |
var_nlevels |
|
Number of original levels for categorical variables |
contrasts |
|
Contrasts used for categorical variables. |
contrasts_type |
|
Type of contrasts ('treatment', 'sum', 'poly', 'helmert', 'other' or 'no.contrast') |
reference_row |
|
Logical indicating if a row is a reference row for categorical variables using a treatment or a sum contrast. Is equal to |
var_label |
|
String of variable labels from the model. Columns labelled with the |
label |
|
String of term labels based on (1) labels provided in |
header_row |
|
Logical indicating if a row is a header row for variables with several terms. Is equal to |
n_obs |
|
Number of observations |
n_event |
|
Number of events (for binomial and multinomial logistic models, Poisson and Cox models) |
exposure |
|
Exposure time (for Poisson and Cox models) |
Note: tidy_add_estimate_to_reference_rows()
does not
create an additional column; rather, it populates the ‘estimate’ column
for reference rows.
Below is a list of additional attributes that
broom.helpers
may attached to the results. The table
includes the attribute name, the function that adds the attribute, and a
short description.
Attribute | Function | Description |
---|---|---|
exponentiate |
|
Indicates if estimates were exponentiated |
coefficients_type |
|
Type of coefficients |
coefficients_label |
|
Coefficients label |
variable_labels |
|
Custom variable labels passed to |
term_labels |
|
Custom term labels passed to |
N_obs |
|
Total number of observations |
N_event |
|
Total number of events |
Exposure |
|
Total of exposure time |
Model | Notes |
---|---|
|
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Limited support. It is recommended to use |
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Limited support. It is recommended to use |
|
May fail with R <= 4.0. |
|
May fail with R <= 4.0. |
|
May fail with R <= 4.0. |
|
May fail with R <= 4.0. |
|
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|
Limited support for categorical variables |
|
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Use default tidier |
|
Limited support. If |
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|
Limited support for models with nominal predictors. |
|
Limited support for models with nominal predictors. |
|
Supported as long as the type of model and the engine is supported. |
|
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|
Reference rows are not relevant for such models. |
|
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|
Limited support |
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Note: this list of models has been tested. broom.helpers
may or may not work properly or partially with other types of models. Do
not hesitate to provide feedback on GitHub.