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validate-statistical-output

pjt222
Actualizado 2 days ago
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Esta habilidad valida los resultados del análisis estadístico mediante programación doble y verificación independiente para entornos regulados, como las presentaciones farmacéuticas. Proporciona metodologías para comparar resultados entre implementaciones (por ejemplo, R vs. SAS), definir tolerancias y manejar desviaciones. Úsela para verificar análisis de variables principales, comprobar la corrección del código o revalidar después de cambios.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/validate-statistical-output

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Validate Statistical Output

Verify stat analysis results via independent calc + systematic comparison.

Use When

  • Validate primary|secondary endpoint analyses → regulatory submissions
  • Double programming (R vs SAS, or independent R impls)
  • Verify analysis code produces correct results
  • Re-validate after code|env changes

In

  • Required: Primary analysis code + results
  • Required: Reference results (independent calc, published vals, known test data)
  • Required: Tolerance criteria for numeric comparisons
  • Optional: Regulatory submission ctx

Do

Step 1: Define Comparison Framework

# Define tolerance levels for different statistics
tolerances <- list(
  counts = 0,           # Exact match for integers
  proportions = 1e-4,   # 0.01% for proportions
  means = 1e-6,         # Numeric precision for means
  p_values = 1e-4,      # 4 decimal places for p-values
  confidence_limits = 1e-3  # 3 decimal places for CIs
)

Got: Tolerance levels per stat category, stricter for int counts (exact), looser for floating-pt (p-vals, CIs).

If err: Tolerances disputed → doc rationale per threshold + sign-off from stat lead before proceed. Refer ICH E9 for regulatory.

Step 2: Comparison Fn

#' Compare two result sets with tolerance-based matching
#'
#' @param primary Results from the primary analysis
#' @param reference Results from the independent calculation
#' @param tolerances Named list of tolerance values
#' @return Data frame with comparison results
compare_results <- function(primary, reference, tolerances) {
  stopifnot(names(primary) == names(reference))

  comparison <- data.frame(
    statistic = names(primary),
    primary_value = unlist(primary),
    reference_value = unlist(reference),
    stringsAsFactors = FALSE
  )

  comparison$absolute_diff <- abs(comparison$primary_value - comparison$reference_value)
  comparison$tolerance <- sapply(comparison$statistic, function(s) {
    # Match to tolerance category or use default
    tol <- tolerances[[s]]
    if (is.null(tol)) tolerances$means  # default tolerance
    else tol
  })

  comparison$pass <- comparison$absolute_diff <= comparison$tolerance

  comparison
}

Got: compare_results() returns df w/ stat name, primary, reference, abs diff, tolerance, pass/fail.

If err: Errors on mismatched names → verify both lists use identical names. Tolerance map fails → add default for unrecognized.

Step 3: Double Programming

Independent impl reaches same results via different code:

# PRIMARY ANALYSIS (in R/primary_analysis.R)
primary_analysis <- function(data) {
  model <- lm(endpoint ~ treatment + baseline + sex, data = data)
  coefs <- summary(model)$coefficients

  list(
    treatment_estimate = coefs["treatmentActive", "Estimate"],
    treatment_se = coefs["treatmentActive", "Std. Error"],
    treatment_p = coefs["treatmentActive", "Pr(>|t|)"],
    n_subjects = nobs(model),
    r_squared = summary(model)$r.squared
  )
}

# INDEPENDENT VERIFICATION (in validation/independent_analysis.R)
# Written by a different analyst or using different methodology
independent_analysis <- function(data) {
  # Using matrix algebra instead of lm()
  X <- model.matrix(~ treatment + baseline + sex, data = data)
  y <- data$endpoint

  beta <- solve(t(X) %*% X) %*% t(X) %*% y
  residuals <- y - X %*% beta
  sigma2 <- sum(residuals^2) / (nrow(X) - ncol(X))
  var_beta <- sigma2 * solve(t(X) %*% X)
  se <- sqrt(diag(var_beta))

  t_stat <- beta["treatmentActive"] / se["treatmentActive"]
  p_value <- 2 * pt(-abs(t_stat), df = nrow(X) - ncol(X))

  list(
    treatment_estimate = as.numeric(beta["treatmentActive"]),
    treatment_se = se["treatmentActive"],
    treatment_p = as.numeric(p_value),
    n_subjects = nrow(data),
    r_squared = 1 - sum(residuals^2) / sum((y - mean(y))^2)
  )
}

Got: 2 independent impls via different code paths (lm() vs matrix algebra) reach same stat results. Different analysts or fundamentally different methods.

If err: Independent impl produces different results → verify both use same input (digest::digest(data)). Check NA handling, contrast coding, df calc.

Step 4: Run Comparison

# Execute both analyses
primary_results <- primary_analysis(study_data)
independent_results <- independent_analysis(study_data)

# Compare
comparison <- compare_results(primary_results, independent_results, tolerances)

# Report
cat("Validation Comparison Report\n")
cat("============================\n")
cat(sprintf("Date: %s\n", Sys.time()))
cat(sprintf("Overall: %s\n\n",
  ifelse(all(comparison$pass), "ALL PASS", "DISCREPANCIES FOUND")))

print(comparison)

Got: Comparison report → all stats within tolerance. Overall reads "ALL PASS."

If err: Discrepancies → don't immediately assume primary wrong. Investigate both: intermediate calcs, identical input data, missing val handling, edge cases.

Step 5: External Reference (SAS)

R vs SAS:

# Load SAS results (exported as CSV or from .sas7bdat)
sas_results <- list(
  treatment_estimate = 1.2345,  # From SAS PROC GLM output
  treatment_se = 0.3456,
  treatment_p = 0.0004,
  n_subjects = 200,
  r_squared = 0.4567
)

comparison <- compare_results(primary_results, sas_results, tolerances)

# Known sources of difference between R and SAS:
# - Default contrasts (R: treatment, SAS: GLM parameterization)
# - Rounding of intermediate calculations
# - Handling of missing values (na.rm vs listwise deletion)

Got: R vs SAS within tolerance, known systematic diffs (contrast coding, rounding) documented + explained.

If err: R + SAS differ beyond tolerance → check 3 most common sources of divergence: default contrast coding (R: treatment, SAS: GLM param), missing val handling, rounding of intermediates. Doc each w/ root cause.

Step 6: Doc Results

Validation report:

# validation/output_comparison_report.R
sink("validation/output_comparison_report.txt")

cat("OUTPUT VALIDATION REPORT\n")
cat("========================\n")
cat(sprintf("Project: %s\n", project_name))
cat(sprintf("Date: %s\n", format(Sys.time())))
cat(sprintf("Primary Analyst: %s\n", primary_analyst))
cat(sprintf("Independent Analyst: %s\n", independent_analyst))
cat(sprintf("R Version: %s\n\n", R.version.string))

cat("COMPARISON RESULTS\n")
cat("------------------\n")
print(comparison, row.names = FALSE)

cat(sprintf("\nOVERALL VERDICT: %s\n",
  ifelse(all(comparison$pass), "VALIDATED", "DISCREPANCIES - INVESTIGATION REQUIRED")))

cat("\nSESSION INFO\n")
print(sessionInfo())

sink()

Got: Complete validation report at validation/output_comparison_report.txt w/ project meta, comparison, verdict, session info.

If err: sink() fails or empty file → check out dir exists (dir.create("validation", showWarnings = FALSE)) + no prior sink() still active (sink.number()).

Step 7: Handle Discrepancies

When results don't match:

  1. Verify both impls use same input (hash compare)
  2. Check NA handling diffs
  3. Compare intermediate calcs step by step
  4. Doc root cause
  5. Determine: acceptable (within tolerance) or requires correction

Got: All discrepancies investigated, root causes ID'd, classified as acceptable (documented) or requiring correction.

If err: Discrepancy can't be explained → escalate to stat lead. Don't dismiss unexplained → may indicate genuine err in one impl.

Check

  • Independent analysis produces results within tolerance
  • All comparison stats documented
  • Discrepancies (if any) investigated + resolved
  • Input data integrity verified (hash match)
  • Tolerance criteria pre-specified + justified
  • Validation report complete + signed

Traps

  • Same analyst writing both impls: Double programming requires independent analysts for true validation
  • Sharing code between impls: Independent ver must not copy from primary
  • Inappropriate tolerance: Too loose hides real errs; too strict flags floating-pt noise
  • Ignore systematic diffs: Small consistent biases may indicate real err even within tolerance
  • No validate validation: Verify comparison code itself works correctly w/ known inputs

  • setup-gxp-r-project — project structure for validated work
  • write-validation-documentation — protocol + report templates
  • implement-audit-trail — track validation process itself
  • write-testthat-tests — automated test suites for ongoing validation

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/validate-statistical-output
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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