Hi @PL ,
Thanks for showing an example of your data. JMP Clinical assumes a different data structure and model with demography data separated from adverse events, laboratory data, con meds, etc. Much like the CDISC data structure for SDTM or ADaM. If your data is not structured in a similar way (or put into a similar structure), then JMP Clinical would not be of any use. Also, it does not have any reports where conditional logistic regression would be applied.
As for JMP or JMP Pro, it is possible using a Choice Model. My colleague @jiancao assisted me with this answer (he really is the one who answered it for me and I am passing it along). Attached are two example with the results saved as JMP Table Scripts in the tables section of the JMP Table. One is 1-1 matching and the other is 1-M matching. Jian said the trick is to uncheck the default Firth Bias-adjusted Estimates option in JMP in order to match SAS output. SAS reports AIC, Wald tests while JMP shows AICc and LR tests, but that the key outputs, such as -2LL and coeff. estimates and std. errors, do match.
Hope that helps.
Chris Kirchberg, M.S.2
Data Scientist, Life Sciences - Global Technical Enablement
JMP Statistical Discovery, LLC. - Denver, CO
Tel: +1-919-531-9927 ▪ Mobile: +1-303-378-7419 ▪ E-mail: chris.kirchberg@jmp.com
www.jmp.com