Abstract: | Nonlinear mixed‐effects models are being widely used for the analysis of longitudinal data, especially from pharmaceutical research. They use random effects which are latent and unobservable variables so the random‐effects distribution is subject to misspecification in practice. In this paper, we first study the consequences of misspecifying the random‐effects distribution in nonlinear mixed‐effects models. Our study is focused on Gauss‐Hermite quadrature, which is now the routine method for calculation of the marginal likelihood in mixed models. We then present a formal diagnostic test to check the appropriateness of the assumed random‐effects distribution in nonlinear mixed‐effects models, which is very useful for real data analysis. Our findings show that the estimates of fixed‐effects parameters in nonlinear mixed‐effects models are generally robust to deviations from normality of the random‐effects distribution, but the estimates of variance components are very sensitive to the distributional assumption of random effects. Furthermore, a misspecified random‐effects distribution will either overestimate or underestimate the predictions of random effects. We illustrate the results using a real data application from an intensive pharmacokinetic study. |