Abstract:Clinical notes contain valuable unstructured information. Named entity recognition (NER) enables the automatic extraction of medical concepts; however, benchmarks for Portuguese remain scarce. In this study, we aimed to evaluate BERT-based models and large language models (LLMs) for clinical NER in Portuguese and to test strategies for addressing multilabel imbalance. We compared BioBERTpt, BERTimbau, ModernBERT, and mmBERT with LLMs such as GPT-5 and Gemini-2.5, using the public SemClinBr corpus and a private breast cancer dataset. Models were trained under identical conditions and evaluated using precision, recall, and F1-score. Iterative stratification, weighted loss, and oversampling were explored to mitigate class imbalance. The mmBERT-base model achieved the best performance (micro F1 = 0.76), outperforming all other models. Iterative stratification improved class balance and overall performance. Multilingual BERT models, particularly mmBERT, perform strongly for Portuguese clinical NER and can run locally with limited computational resources. Balanced data-splitting strategies further enhance performance.