10.6084/m9.figshare.5954836.v1 Signe Marie Jensen Signe Marie Jensen Christian Ritz Christian Ritz Dataset for: A comparison of approaches for simultaneous inference of fixed effects for multiple outcomes using linear mixed models Wiley 2018 family-wise error rates joint modelling marginal models multiple testing pairwise fitting Statistics Medicine 2018-05-07 14:14:51 Dataset https://wiley.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Dataset_for_A_comparison_of_approaches_for_simultaneous_inference_of_fixed_effects_for_multiple_outcomes_using_linear_mixed_models/5954836 Longitudinal studies with multiple outcomes often pose challenges for the statistical analysis. A joint model including all outcomes has the advantage of incorporating the simultaneous behavior but is often difficult to fit due to computational challenges. We consider two alternative approaches in order to quantify and assess the loss in efficiency as compared to joint modelling when evaluating fixed effects. The first approach is pairwise fitting of pseudo-likelihood functions for pairs of outcomes. The second approach recovers correlations between parameter estimates across multiple marginal linear mixed models. The methods are evaluated both in terms of a data example from a study on the effects of milk protein on health in young adolescents and in an extensive simulation study. We find that the two alternatives give similar results in settings where an exchangeability condition is met, but otherwise pairwise fitting shows a larger loss in efficiency than the marginal models approach. Using an alternative to the joint modelling strategy will lead to some but not necessarily a large loss of efficiency for small sample sizes.