1 Introduction

(This package is NOT part of HADES.)

The idea behind this package is to allow the construction of new cohorts from previously instantiated cohorts in the cohort table. All cohorts in OHDSI have a standard definition: “A cohort is a set of persons who satisfy one or more inclusion criteria for a duration of time.”

This is represented in a cohort table as cohort_definition_id, subject_id, cohort_start_date and cohort_end_date. For more details about the concept of a cohort please review The Book of OHDSI.

This package allows the creation of new cohorts from previously instantiated cohort table using cohort algebra (similar to temporal set algebra). The output is one or more new cohorts.

1.1 Installation

  • This is an installable R-package that may be installed as follows:
remotes::install_github("OHDSI/CohortAlgebra")

1.2 Cohort UNION

  • Given two or more cohorts, an UNION operator on these cohorts creates a new cohort with continuous days the persons was present in any of the cohorts. For example: given a cohort table as follows
cohort
#> # A tibble: 3 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-03-01   
#> 2                  2         1 2022-02-10      2022-05-10   
#> 3                  2         1 2022-08-15      2022-12-30

The union of the two cohorts is expected to give us

cohortExpected
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  3         1 2022-01-01      2022-05-10   
#> 2                  3         1 2022-08-15      2022-12-30

Cohort Union To perform Cohort Union, we use the unionCohorts function. This function requires as an input a data.frame called oldToNewCohortId. Here we specify the cohort id’s of the cohorts we want to union. The newCohortId is the cohortId of the resultant cohort. The oldCohortId are cohorts that are already in the cohort table.

oldToNewCohortId <-
  dplyr::tibble(
    oldCohortId = c(1, 2, 2),
    newCohortId = c(3, 3, 3)
  )

CohortAlgebra::unionCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  oldToNewCohortId = oldToNewCohortId
)

Now we will have a new cohortId ‘3’ which is the union of cohortIds 1 and 2.

data
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  3         1 2022-01-01      2022-05-10   
#> 2                  3         1 2022-08-15      2022-12-30

Note: if the target cohort table had a cohort with cohortId = 3, before running the union function - this would cause a conflict. In those cases, the union function would not run. We can purge all records for cohortId = 3 from the target cohort table. The parameter purgeConflicts will delete any cohort records in the cohort table where cohortId is the cohortId of the newCohort.

1.3 InterSect Cohort

  • Given two or more cohorts, an INTERSECT operator on these cohorts creates a new cohort with continuous days the persons was present in ALL of the cohorts.

1.3.1 Intersect cohort example 1

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-15   
#> 2                  2         1 2021-12-15      2022-01-30
CohortAlgebra::intersectCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  cohortIds = c(1, 2),
  newCohortId = 3
)
Cohort Intersect 1
Cohort Intersect 1

Output

1.3.2 Intersect cohort example 2

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 3 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-15   
#> 2                  2         1 2021-12-15      2022-01-05   
#> 3                  2         1 2022-01-10      2022-01-30
CohortAlgebra::intersectCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  cohortIds = c(1, 2),
  newCohortId = 3
)
Cohort Intersect 2
Cohort Intersect 2

Output

1.3.3 Intersect cohort example 3

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 3 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-15   
#> 2                  2         1 2021-12-15      2022-01-30   
#> 3                  3         1 2022-03-01      2022-03-15
CohortAlgebra::intersectCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  cohortIds = c(1, 2, 3),
  newCohortId = 4
)
Cohort Intersect 3
Cohort Intersect 3

Output

1.3.4 Intersect cohort example 4

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 3 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-15   
#> 2                  2         1 2021-12-15      2022-01-30   
#> 3                  3         1 2022-03-01      2022-03-15
CohortAlgebra::intersectCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  cohortIds = c(1, 2, 3),
  newCohortId = 4
)
Cohort Intersect 4
Cohort Intersect 4

Output

1.3.5 Intersect cohort example 5

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-01   
#> 2                  2         1 2022-01-01      2022-01-02
Cohort Intersect 5
Cohort Intersect 5

Output

1.4 Minus Cohort

Input:

cohort
#> # A tibble: 2 x 4
#>   cohortDefinitionId subjectId cohortStartDate cohortEndDate
#>                <dbl>     <dbl> <date>          <date>       
#> 1                  1         1 2022-01-01      2022-03-01   
#> 2                  2         1 2022-02-10      2022-05-10
CohortAlgebra::minusCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  firstCohortId = 1,
  secondCohortId = 2,
  newCohortId = 3
)
Cohort Minus
Cohort Minus

Output for example 1

But if the cohorts are switched, i.e. minus cohort 1 from Cohort 2

CohortAlgebra::minusCohorts(
  connection = connection,
  sourceCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  sourceCohortTable = tableName,
  targetCohortDatabaseSchema = cohortDatabaseSchema,
  targetCohortTable = tableName,
  firstCohortId = 2,
  secondCohortId = 1,
  newCohortId = 4
)
Cohort Minus
Cohort Minus

Output

Sequence of cohorts are important for minusCohort