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validate-statistical-output

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

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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

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Documentación

Validate Statistical Output

Verify statistical analysis results through independent calculation, systematic comparison.

When Use

  • Validating primary, secondary endpoint analyses for regulatory submissions
  • Performing double programming (R vs SAS, or independent R implementations)
  • Verifying analysis code produces correct results
  • Re-validating after code or environment changes

Inputs

  • Required: Primary analysis code and results
  • Required: Reference results (independent calculation, published values, or known test data)
  • Required: Tolerance criteria for numeric comparisons
  • Optional: Regulatory submission context

Steps

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 defined for each statistic category, with stricter tolerances for integer counts (exact match) and looser tolerances for floating-point statistics (p-values, confidence intervals).

If err: Tolerance levels disputed? Document rationale for each threshold. Get sign-off from statistical lead before proceeding. Refer to ICH E9 guidelines for regulatory submissions.

Step 2: Create Comparison Function

#' 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 data frame with columns for statistic name, primary value, reference value, absolute difference, tolerance, pass/fail status.

If err: Function errors on mismatched names? Verify both result lists use identical statistic names. Tolerance mapping fails? Add default tolerance for unrecognized statistic names.

Step 3: Implement Double Programming

Write independent implementation reaching same results through 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: Two independent implementations exist that use different code paths (e.g., lm() vs. matrix algebra) to arrive at same statistical results. Implementations written by different analysts or use fundamentally different methods.

If err: Independent implementation produces different results? First verify both use same input data (compare digest::digest(data)). Then check differences in NA handling, contrast coding, or degrees-of-freedom calculations.

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 shows all statistics within tolerance. Overall line reads "ALL PASS."

If err: Discrepancies found? Don't immediately assume primary analysis wrong. Investigate both implementations: check intermediate calculations, verify identical input data, compare handling of missing values and edge cases.

Step 5: Compare Against External Reference (SAS)

When comparing R output against 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 comparison results within tolerance. Known systematic differences (contrast coding, rounding) documented and explained.

If err: R and SAS produce different results beyond tolerance? Check three most common sources of divergence: default contrast coding (R uses treatment contrasts, SAS uses GLM parameterization), handling of missing values, rounding of intermediate calculations. Document each difference with root cause.

Step 6: Document Results

Create 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 file exists at validation/output_comparison_report.txt containing project metadata, comparison results, overall verdict, session information.

If err: sink() fails or produces empty file? Check output directory exists (dir.create("validation", showWarnings = FALSE)). No prior sink() call still active (use sink.number() to check).

Step 7: Handle Discrepancies

When results don't match:

  1. Verify both implementations use same input data (hash comparison)
  2. Check differences in NA handling
  3. Compare intermediate calculations step by step
  4. Document root cause
  5. Determine if difference acceptable (within tolerance) or requires code correction

Got: All discrepancies investigated, root causes identified. Each classified as either acceptable (within tolerance with documented reason) or requiring code correction.

If err: Discrepancy cannot be explained? Escalate to statistical lead. Don't dismiss unexplained differences — may indicate genuine error in one implementation.

Check

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

Pitfalls

  • Same analyst writing both implementations: Double programming needs independent analysts for true validation
  • Share code between implementations: Independent version must not copy from primary
  • Inappropriate tolerance: Too loose hides real errors. Too strict flags floating-point noise
  • Ignore systematic differences: Small consistent biases may indicate real error even within tolerance
  • No validate the validation: Verify comparison code itself works correctly with known inputs

See Also

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

Repositorio GitHub

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

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