Creating NMB functions

NMB functions

The key aspect of predictNMB is its ability to evaluate simulated prediction models in terms of Net Monetary Benefit (NMB). To do so, it requires the user to create and provide functions that assign NMB values to each of the four possible classifications in a confusion matrix. These functions create named vectors, which are vectors of values that provide an NMB value for each possible outcome:

This vignette will guide you through creating these functions by hand, as well as using the helper function, get_nmb_sampler(). We start with key considerations for the user when creating these functions to best reflect their clinical context, and finish by using the created functions with do_nmb_sim().

If you, the user, wish to incorporate Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) lost due to the event being predicted and a willingness to pay (WTP) and be able to create a cost-effectiveness plot, you must use get_nmb_sampler() rather than constructing this function by hand. If only the vector of values above are recorded, do_nmb_sim() cannot determine how the NMB is broken down into QALYs and healthcare/intervention costs. (More on this later.)

Key considerations

The functions created here are used for two purposes, depending on which argument they are passed to, within do_nmb_sim() or screen_simulation_inputs(). The arguments that require these functions are:

The function that generates the named vector used by the fx_nmb_evaluation argument is re-evaluated at every iteration of the simulation. In other words, we are sampling from a range of plausible values for our simulation inputs. This allows us to incorporate uncertainty since it is unlikely that we know these costs or outcomes exactly. By incorporating uncertainty this way, we are propagating the uncertainty throughout the whole model. This is good practice in simulation modelling because our simulation will never be able to perfectly mirror the reality of finding the best method. If we include no uncertainty in fx_nmb_evaluation, we are assuming that we know each input of the model exactly.

Note that we use our best estimates (without uncertainty) for the fx_nmb_training function. This reflects the fact that when cutpoints are selected in practice, they usually stay fixed rather than varying by scenario. It is this fixed value we are evaluating our simulations against, so we want it to be the same every time to measure the potential benefit of choosing another cutpoint. This may indicate that the merits of cost_minimising and value_optimising cutpoints could be overestimated, which will be discussed at the end when we explore do_nmb_sim().

The mean NMB per patient is evaluated at the end of each simulated iteration based on the inputs we have created (our named vector from before). For more information, see the associated vignette using browseVignettes(package = "predictNMB")).

Making functions by hand

This first section describes how to make the functions described above by hand. For users unfamiliar with R functions, this section may be unintuitive, and the subsequent get_nmb_sampler() section may be a gentler introduction. This section introduces all the flexibility that the user can express when creating these functions but may be excessive in many cases.

The following function applies exact estimates for each square of a confusion matrix:

foo1 <- function() {
  c(
    "TP" = -3,
    "FP" = -1,
    "TN" = 0,
    "FN" = -4
  )
}
foo1()
#> TP FP TN FN 
#> -3 -1  0 -4

Note that NMB values for each classification are equal to or less than zero. If we frame this around an adverse healthcare event, for example, inpatient falls, our best case scenario is avoiding a fall without needing to provide any additional fall prevention care beyond usual patient care (TN = 0). The outcomes are negative because falls impose an additional burden. The remaining outcomes can be calculated if we know that the cost of a fall is $4, the cost of the intervention is $1, and the intervention reduces the falls rate by 50%.

For our possible classifications:

Users may provide any function without arguments in this form to be more flexible. This allows the user to incorporate uncertainty for model evaluation, because we may not know our inputs exactly. For example, in the function below, we have sampled from distributions of values, rather than setting our expected value of each outcome. Every time we call the function, we get different values based on our chosen distributions - except for true negative (TN) as it is fixed at zero. This sampling procedure is important for evaluation and is often referred to in health economics as Probabilistic Sensitivity Analysis (PSA).

foo2 <- function() {
  intervention_cost <- rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1)
  intervention_effectiveness <- rbeta(n = 1, shape1 = 10, shape2 = 10)
  fall_cost <- rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4)

  c(
    "TP" = -intervention_cost - fall_cost * (1 - intervention_effectiveness),
    "FP" = -intervention_cost,
    "TN" = 0,
    "FN" = -fall_cost
  )
}

foo2()
#>        TP        FP        TN        FN 
#> -2.609371 -1.584900  0.000000 -2.372346
foo2()
#>        TP        FP        TN        FN 
#> -5.504415 -2.484465  0.000000 -5.123754
foo2()
#>         TP         FP         TN         FN 
#> -1.9349893 -0.1614961  0.0000000 -4.5971342

Another benefit of allowing the user to define the function structure is that we can also allow the low-risk group, or the population whose risk estimates fall below the probability threshold, to receive an intervention rather than nothing.

This can be preferable when there is more than one available intervention to use, and one is more costly (and presumably effective) than the other. For example, all patients in a hospital might have a medication management plan in place to reduce falls risk but the high-risk group might also receive additional surveillance from nurses. This way, we can assign all high-risk patients to receive the high-cost and highly effective intervention, and all low-risk patients to receive the low-cost and less effective intervention. Extending foo2() to create the function below, we assign the low-cost intervention $0.5 and a reduction in falls of 30%.

foo3 <- function() {
  # intervention for high-risk (hr) group
  hr_intervention_cost <- rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1)
  hr_intervention_effectiveness <- rbeta(n = 1, shape1 = 10, shape2 = 10)

  # intervention for low-risk (lr) group
  lr_intervention_cost <- rgamma(n = 1, shape = 0.5 * 10, rate = 1 * 10)
  lr_intervention_effectiveness <- rbeta(n = 1, shape1 = 10, shape2 = 30)


  fall_cost <- rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4)

  c(
    "TP" = -hr_intervention_cost - fall_cost * 
      (1 - hr_intervention_effectiveness),
    "FP" = -hr_intervention_cost,
    "TN" = -lr_intervention_cost,
    "FN" = -lr_intervention_cost - fall_cost * 
      (1 - lr_intervention_effectiveness)
  )
}

foo3()
#>        TP        FP        TN        FN 
#> -4.270691 -2.659545 -1.008383 -2.804848
foo3()
#>         TP         FP         TN         FN 
#> -5.1611505 -4.4007636 -0.6212875 -2.4236755
foo3()
#>        TP        FP        TN        FN 
#> -2.045110 -1.043582 -0.741041 -2.114888

Now that we are providing an intervention and associated cost to the low-risk group, there is a negative NMB assigned to true negative (TN) groups. But in exchange, we have reduced the costs of false negatives (FNs), because at least these patients are now receiving an intervention, albeit a less effective one.

It’s important to note that while these NMB values are negative, this doesn’t imply that we are worse off by implementing prediction models or treatments. We are simply trying to pick the least bad option. This becomes more apparent when we set a reference strategy, which is discussed in more detail in the introductory and detailed example vignettes.

Making functions using get_nmb_sampler()

The previous section demonstrates how to make functions by hand and a general approach to thinking about intervention costs and effects. This same approach is used by get_nmb_sampler() but abstracts the actual creation of the function away to make things more straightforward for the user. It can be easier to apply for simple cases, but removes some of the ability to do complex modelling.

To replicate what we created as foo1(), we pass these costs as separate arguments. The function is created, with the output get_nmb_sampler(). Recall:

The cost of the fall is $4, the cost of the intervention is $1, and the intervention reduces the rate of falls by 50%.

library(predictNMB)

foo1_remake <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    outcome_cost = 4,
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = 1,
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = 0.5
  )

foo1_remake()
#> TP FP TN FN 
#> -3 -1  0 -4
foo1()
#> TP FP TN FN 
#> -3 -1  0 -4

The arguments are passed as costs (outcome_cost and high_risk_group_treatment_cost) and the treatment effect. high_risk_group_treatment_effect is the rate reduction of the event for those receiving the treatment, which in our case is a 50% reduction (0.5).

First, we write some code for making plots of sampled NMB values from a given function:

library(tidyr)
library(ggplot2)
plot_nmb_dist <- function(f, n = 10000) {
  data <- do.call("rbind", lapply(1:n, function(x) f()))

  data_long <- pivot_longer(
    as.data.frame(data),
    cols = everything(),
    names_to = "classification",
    values_to = "NMB"
  )

  ggplot(data_long, aes(NMB)) +
    geom_histogram() +
    facet_wrap(~classification) +
    theme_bw() +
    labs(y = "", x = "Net Monetary Benefit ($)")
}

Now we can incorporate uncertainty by passing argument-less functions (function()), followed by a sampler (e.g. rgamma), which generates sampled values as the arguments. When calling get_nmb_sampler(), we specify the values as the blank functions, which are evaluated every time the returned function is called. These let us see the uncertainty of each classification graphically.

foo2_remake <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    # our blank function, followed by a sampler
    outcome_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4), 
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1),
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = function() rbeta(n = 1, 
                                                        shape1 = 10, 
                                                        shape2 = 10)
  )

plot_nmb_dist(foo2_remake) + ggtitle("foo2_remake()")
#> `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.
plot_nmb_dist(foo2) + ggtitle("foo2()")
#> `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.

We can also create an NMB function which replicates our prior scenario where the low-risk group is given a cheaper and less effective intervention.

foo3_remake <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    outcome_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4),
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1),
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = function() rbeta(n = 1, 
                                                        shape1 = 10, 
                                                        shape2 = 10),
    low_risk_group_treatment_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, 
                                                      shape = 0.5 * 10, 
                                                      rate = 1 * 10),
    low_risk_group_treatment_effect = function() rbeta(n = 1, 
                                                       shape1 = 10, 
                                                       shape2 = 30)
  )

plot_nmb_dist(foo3_remake) + ggtitle("foo3_remake()")
#> `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.
plot_nmb_dist(foo3) + ggtitle("foo3()")
#> `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.

In addition to specifying the cost of the outcome, we can also incorporate health-related quality of life in the form of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and our willingness to pay (WTP) for these QALYs. These are included as inputs to get_nmb_sampler() to evaluate the overall net monetary benefit using:

You must provide EITHER the outcome_cost alone OR the wtp AND qalys_lost. You can also provide all three if, for example, there are some fixed costs associated with the event separate from the QALYs lost. For example, following a fall, every patient may have an X-ray, and this would be a separate cost to the QALYs lost and our willingness to pay for those QALYs due to the fall.

Returning to our falls function, if our WTP is $8 and each fall is associated with a 0.5 QALY lost (on average), then this would be equivalent to our fixed cost of $4. By having these included in the function as separate arguments, we can more clearly represent each input to the model and provide more realistic representations. We can use this to generate estimates (and uncertainty) for the QALYs lost due to the event we are evaluating and our WTP to avoid the event.

foo4 <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    wtp = 8,
    qalys_lost = 0.5,
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = 1,
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = 0.5
  )

foo4()
#>                               TP                               FP 
#>                             -3.0                             -1.0 
#>                               TN                               FN 
#>                              0.0                             -4.0 
#>                       qalys_lost                              wtp 
#>                              0.5                              8.0 
#>                     outcome_cost high_risk_group_treatment_effect 
#>                              0.0                              0.5 
#>   high_risk_group_treatment_cost  low_risk_group_treatment_effect 
#>                              1.0                              0.0 
#>    low_risk_group_treatment_cost 
#>                              0.0
foo1()
#> TP FP TN FN 
#> -3 -1  0 -4

Tracking QALYs

When the NMB sampling function is made using get_nmb_sampler() and incorporates qalys_lost and wtp, the resulting object is a bit different to the basic function returning the four values for TP, FP, TN, and FN. foo4 below is a function that returns the same values for these four classifications as the previous examples but, since it includes a wtp and qalys_lost, it knows that it’s possible to create a cost-effectiveness plot if the extra details are recorded during the simulations. As a result, the vector returned when evaluating foo4 includes the treatment costs and effectiveness values, the QALYs lost and the WTP. Functions made using get_nmb_sampler() are NMBsampler objects and they also contain whether to do these extra evaluations at each simulation by the value of the track_qalys attribute. The WTP is stored in the wtp attribute and this is used to create the cost-effectiveness plan in the cost-effectiveness plot.

foo4 <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    wtp = 8,
    qalys_lost = 0.5,
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = 1,
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = 0.5
  )

foo4()
#>                               TP                               FP 
#>                             -3.0                             -1.0 
#>                               TN                               FN 
#>                              0.0                             -4.0 
#>                       qalys_lost                              wtp 
#>                              0.5                              8.0 
#>                     outcome_cost high_risk_group_treatment_effect 
#>                              0.0                              0.5 
#>   high_risk_group_treatment_cost  low_risk_group_treatment_effect 
#>                              1.0                              0.0 
#>    low_risk_group_treatment_cost 
#>                              0.0
class(foo4)
#> [1] "NMBsampler"
class(foo1)
#> [1] "function"
attributes(foo4)
#> $class
#> [1] "NMBsampler"
#> 
#> $track_qalys
#> [1] TRUE
#> 
#> $wtp
#> [1] 8

Note that if we run our simulation when we use foo4 as our evaluation function, we are able to create a ce_plot() and the resulting object from do_nmb_sim() has some extra content due to storing these extra data at each iteration of the simulation. Below, we pass these functions to do_nmb_sim() (more details on this later). For the simulation_foo4, we used foo4 which has the ability to track QALYs and for simulation_foo1, we used foo1, which doesn’t have that ability.

simulation_foo4 <- do_nmb_sim(
  sample_size = 200, n_sims = 500, n_valid = 10000, sim_auc = 0.7,
  event_rate = 0.1, fx_nmb_training = foo1, fx_nmb_evaluation = foo4,
  cutpoint_methods = c("all", "none", "youden", "value_optimising")
)

simulation_foo1 <- do_nmb_sim(
  sample_size = 200, n_sims = 500, n_valid = 10000, sim_auc = 0.7,
  event_rate = 0.1, fx_nmb_training = foo1, fx_nmb_evaluation = foo1,
  cutpoint_methods = c("all", "none", "youden", "value_optimising")
)

There’s a difference in the data collected during the simulations between the two.

names(simulation_foo4)
#> [1] "df_result"     "df_thresholds" "meta_data"     "df_qalys"     
#> [5] "df_costs"
names(simulation_foo1)
#> [1] "df_result"     "df_thresholds" "meta_data"

And when that data are available, we can create a cost-effectiveness plot with ce_plot(), but not without.

ce_plot(simulation_foo4, ref_col = "all")

ce_plot(simulation_foo1, ref_col = "all")
#> Error in ce_plot.predictNMBsim(simulation_foo1, ref_col = "all"): This predictNMBsim object did not track the QALYs and costs at each simulation so a cost-effectiveness plot cannot be made. This is likely because the functions used for 'fx_nmb_training' and 'fx_nmb_evaluation' were either not made using 'get_nmb_sampler()' or, if they were, they didn't use 'qalys_lost' and 'wtp'.

Passing these functions to do_nmb_sim()

The NMB functions are passed to the do_nmb_sim() function via the fx_nmb_training and fx_nmb_evaluation arguments. The former is purely for selecting a cutpoint if you’re using either the 'cost_minimising' or 'value_optimising' cutpoint methods. Here, we will use the 'value_optimising' cutpoint method alongside the Youden index and a treat all/none strategy.

In this first example, we pass foo1 to the do_nmb_sim() function, which is our function that always provides the same values for every simulation, as if we know the exact outcome of each possible prediction. As mentioned before, see the other vignettes for more information on the inputs for the do_nmb_sim() function.

simulation_res1 <- do_nmb_sim(
  sample_size = 200, n_sims = 500, n_valid = 10000, sim_auc = 0.7,
  event_rate = 0.1, fx_nmb_training = foo1, fx_nmb_evaluation = foo1,
  cutpoint_methods = c("all", "none", "youden", "value_optimising")
)
autoplot(simulation_res1) + theme_sim()

As mentioned previously, the problem with using foo1 for fx_nmb_evaluation is that we don’t really know for sure how effective our intervention is, what the burden of the event is, and how much things cost. This is why we incorporate uncertainty into the evaluation function, but ONLY the evaluation function and not the training function. If we use an NMB function that incorporates uncertainty for selecting the cutpoint in fx_nmb_training, this would mean we picked costs randomly and used those on our data to select a cutpoint. This would be unlikely in practice, as we would use our expected value (best estimates) to determine cutpoints in reality.

get_nmb_sampler() also offers the ability to extract these fixed (expected) values by sampling from the distributions and using the column means for fx_nmb_training.

For example, using foo2_remake(), we use get_nmb_sampler() in the same way but include use_expected_values = TRUE so that it returns a function that gives fixed values for training:

foo2_remake <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    outcome_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4),
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1),
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = function() rbeta(n = 1, 
                                                        shape1 = 10, 
                                                        shape2 = 10)
  )

foo2_remake_training <-
  get_nmb_sampler(
    outcome_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 4),
    high_risk_group_treatment_cost = function() rgamma(n = 1, shape = 1),
    high_risk_group_treatment_effect = function() rbeta(n = 1,
                                                        shape1 = 10, 
                                                        shape2 = 10),
    use_expected_values = TRUE
  )

foo2_remake_training()
#>         TP         FP         TN         FN 
#> -2.9840607 -0.9817906  0.0000000 -4.0199997
foo2_remake_training()
#>         TP         FP         TN         FN 
#> -2.9840607 -0.9817906  0.0000000 -4.0199997
foo2_remake_training()
#>         TP         FP         TN         FN 
#> -2.9840607 -0.9817906  0.0000000 -4.0199997

In many cases (including this one), this will give similar values to using the parameter estimates (i.e. foo1()), but not always. The values from this process should be more stable than using the estimates.

simulation_res2 <- do_nmb_sim(
  sample_size = 200, n_sims = 500, n_valid = 10000, sim_auc = 0.7,
  event_rate = 0.1, fx_nmb_training = foo2_remake_training, 
  fx_nmb_evaluation = foo2_remake,
  cutpoint_methods = c("all", "none", "youden", "value_optimising")
)
autoplot(simulation_res2) + theme_sim()

This changes our results to incorporate more uncertainty. This is important in simulation modelling as it accounts for the possible differences between our simulation and reality. Using values from the literature would likely reduce the uncertainty somewhat, but that might only be desirable if we are confident that our simulated model closely resembles the scenario in the literature.