Clinical investigations guidance
Information on how to notify the MHRA of your intention to carry out a clinical investigation for medical devices.
You may need to carry out a clinical investigation as part of the process to obtain a UKCA / CE / CE UKNI marking for your medical device. You must inform the MHRA if you are planning to do this at least 60 days before starting your investigation.
Use this flow chart to decide if you are required to submit a formal clinical investigation
Please note: applications under Annex XVI of the Medical Device Regulation (EU) 2017/745 (MDR) for devices with no intended medical purpose cannot be accepted in GB.
Clinical investigation enquiries
For any specific enquires relating to applications for clinical investigations please submit your enquiry to info@mhra.gov.uk and ensure you add ‘clinical investigation enquiry’ in the subject line so it can be managed appropriately.
How to notify the MHRA of your clinical investigation
Start your application via IRAS.
Note - A notification to the MHRA will not be required for medical devices that are UKCA / CE / CE UKNI marked for the purpose that is under investigation.
Fees
New fees for clinical investigations and amendments were introduced in April 2023 please see section 9 of our fees page.
Medical Devices Regulations 2002
A fee under this regulation
(a) shall be payable when the notice to which it relates is given to the Secretary of State;
and
(b) shall accompany that notice when it is given
In applying the regulation and to avoid delays, MHRA require payment to be made upon confirmation of a valid application for a clinical investigation or amendment to a clinical investigation.
A final regulatory decision (approval or objection letter) on the application or amendment will not be provided until payment has been received.
For more information on how to make a payment, please see the relevant sections on payments below.
Validation Checklist
When we receive your application for a clinical investigation of a medical device our regulatory handers will validate your application against the Clinical investigation application check list. We hope that in providing this checklist it will support you in submitting a valid application.
MHRA guidance
Follow the guidance on compiling a submission and guidance for manufacturers when preparing your notification application.
Applications are submitted electronically using the Integrated Research Application System (IRAS).
See information for clinical investigators for what is required by clinicians involved in the investigation.
Check the electrical guidance for clinical investigations.
Check the information on the
for the scientific data you must submit.Check
for presenting statistical information for your clinical investigation.See the guidance on UKCA markings.
Regulatory advice meetings
The MHRA Clinical investigations team can offer a comprehensive device regulatory advice meeting.
Whilst we cannot review individual documents, we can provide guidance on navigating the regulatory landscape.
Please see our information on fees regarding the charges for a regulatory advice meeting
To request a regulatory advice meeting please contact the Head of clinical investigations – mark.grumbridge@mhra.gov.uk
Assessment
This section concerns clinical investigations being conducted in Great Britain only. Please see the separate section below for studies involving Northern Ireland.
When the MHRA has received your documents and validated them, we will contact to you within 5 working days to confirm that the 60-day assessment period has started, or we will let you know if there are any issues. If there are any issues raised, the 60-day assessment period will start when we receive a valid response.
Day 1 of the 60 days is taken as being the first day that follows the date of acceptance of a valid application. For example, if an application is received on 24 August and the assessor validates the submission on 28 August, the clock starts on 29 August.
During the assessment, experts will assess the safety and performance of your device as well as the design of the clinical investigation to be carried out. The MHRA will write to you if we require further information. It is essential that you contact the MHRA as soon as possible if you require clarification. If there are possible grounds for objection, where possible we will arrange a teleconference for a better understanding and to find a resolution within the 60-day assessment time.
A letter will be sent to you by the 60th day with a decision (‘objection’ or ‘no objection’) as to whether or not you can carry out the proposed clinical investigation.
Payment for a Clinical Investigation
You will need to pay a fee for your clinical investigation (see Fees above).
Please provide the following information when applying for your clinical investigation, this will enable accurate and timely invoicing:
- Company name and full address
- Contact name and email address of the individual responsible for paying the fee
- If applicable a company invoice or transaction number
Once you have received your invoice and made the payment, please provide evidence of payment by email, quoting the MHRA reference (CI/XXXX/XXX).
Please send to: CI-applications@mhra.gov.uk
Serious adverse event (SAE) reporting
This section concerns clinical investigations being conducted in Great Britain only. Please see the separate section below for studies involving Northern Ireland.
In line with UK Regulations and MEDDEV 2.7/3, all reportable events must be fully recorded and notified to the MHRA. This includes all serious adverse events, irrespective of whether the device has been assessed as having a causal relationship, and reportable events (per MEDDEV 2.7/3) occurring in third countries in which a clinical investigation is performed under the same clinical investigation plan. These can be provided using either the MEDDEV 2.7/3 SAE reporting table, or the MDCG 2020-10/2 SAE reporting table, as long as the required information is included.
Please submit an SAE reporting form in the new MORE portal with your completed table attached.
See details on how to register for the MORE portal.
MEDDEV 2.7/3 also contains further guidance on clinical investigation reporting in Great Britain.
Quarterly summary reports
As per the conditions of MHRA approval for a clinical investigation, in addition to the reporting of individual serious adverse events as detailed above, please provide Quarterly Summary Reports that should provide an update on the latest overall safety profile for the investigation.
When providing these summaries, use the https://more.mhra.gov.uk/login
. This template is for devices only but should also be used for device-related reporting on any combined studies. Do not include detail on any Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP) under investigation. Quarterly Summary reports should be submitted directly viaEnd of study reports
Please email your end of study report to CI-applications@mhra.gov.uk.
Study Deviations
Sponsors must notify the MHRA of all deviations relating to UK study sites only as soon as they have been made aware of them. Details about the nature of the deviation, when it occurred, where it occurred, and any proposed corrective and preventative actions should be provided.
Use the following MHRA protocol deviation tracker Excel template when reporting deviations and keep this as a ‘live’ document so that new deviations can be added. This enables both the sponsor and MHRA to have a complete overview each time it is submitted.
Send the completed spreadsheet to the MHRA via email at info@mhra.gov.uk.
Coordinated assessment pathway process
MHRA is collaborating with the Health Research Authority (HRA) on the coordinated assessment pathway which involves our two organisations sharing information during our assessment of medical device clinical investigations. For this process we require the MHRA Devices application to be submitted first and then the REC application to be submitted as soon as MHRA has confirmed the devices application to be valid.
See MHRA / HRA Coordinated pathway for further information.
Combined review of a CTIMP and medical device
Combined review is the way research teams seek approval for new Clinical Trials of Investigational Medicinal Products (CTIMPs) and combined medicine and device trials.
Research teams make a single application using a new part of IRAS, which goes to both the MHRA and a research ethics committee (REC) at the same time. The application also goes for study wide review, such as HRA and HCRW approval, if the study is to take place in the NHS or Northern Ireland HSC.
The regulatory and ethics reviews are done in parallel and any requests for further information (RFIs) are raised jointly. A single response to these requests leads to a single decision from both reviews. Study wide review is usually issued at the same time as MHRA and REC, but may come later if there are still issues to discuss with the applicant.
IRAS is used for the initial application and supports the trial through amendments right up to the end of the trial. Research teams can allocate different roles in the system for colleagues working on the project.
Further information is available in our Combined IMP device guidance.
Amendments
This section concerns clinical investigations conducted in Great Britain only. See the separate section below for studies involving Northern Ireland.
Once you’ve received a letter of no objection from us, you must notify the MHRA of all proposed amendments to the investigation. You must wait until we send you another letter of no objection before you implement the changes.
You must tell us about any changes made to:
- the device under investigation
- study documentation, including the clinical investigation plan
- investigators or investigating institutions
- changes requested by an ethics committee
If you don’t tell us about proposed amendments you could be liable to prosecution.
Please begin your amendment submission on HRA IRAS.
You can refer to the IRAS User Guide’s section on amendments.
When you notify MHRA of amendments, we require the following information:
- a covering letter with the MHRA reference number for the clinical investigation (e.g. CI/2023/XXXX). Please ensure the following details for who is making the amendment payment are included: a. company name and full address b. contact name and email address of the individual responsible for paying the fee c. If applicable a PO number or transaction number
- a table with a summary of each proposed change with the justification for each change
- red-lined (showing changes being made) and clean copies of all amended study documentation
- a signed statement by, or on behalf of, the manufacturer that the proposed change(s) do not predictably increase the risk to the patient, user or third party
- proof of payment. Please follow the payment process as outlined in the section below.
- Incomplete Submissions. Where the above guidance is not followed, it will result in the submission being returned.
Email the amendments to CI-amendments@mhra.gov.uk, unless the files are too big, in which case contact us at the same email address to request a link for uploading the documents. Only amendments submitted to this mailbox will be processed. Do not submit amendments to individuals or any other mailbox.
Payment for an Amendment
You will need to pay a fee for amendments to clinical investigations (see Fees above).
Please note: MHRA does not consider an amendment submission valid until all required documents (including proof of payment) have been received. The Agency will not review the amendment or provide a final regulatory decision (approval or objection letter) until this time.
Payments can be made online via Make a payment to MHRA.
Please note the following updated process:
- Make a payment via Make a payment to MHRA quoting the MHRA ref (CI/ XXXX/XXXX) and the amendment number (e.g. amendment No1) as the invoice number.
- Once you have made the payment, please submit your amendment to CI-amendments@mhra.gov.uk including all the documents required as stated above. Ensure evidence of payment is provided and quote the MHRA reference number (CI/XXXX/XXX) and amendment number as the email subject.
After you have received the decision letter for your amendment you will be sent an official invoice. Please note this is for your records only and no further action is required.
Early termination or temporary halt of a clinical investigation
Sponsors are required to notify the MHRA of the early termination of a clinical investigation and provide a justification for the early termination as stated in Regulations 16(11) and Section 29(10) of the UK MDR 2002.
The MHRA may request a copy of the final written report of a clinical investigation of a device falling within the scope of the UK MDR 2002 (Regulations 16(10) and 29(9)).
Sponsors are also requested to notify the MHRA of a temporary halt of a clinical investigation.
Send the notifications to the MHRA via email at info@mhra.gov.uk.
Northern Ireland
The Northern Ireland Protocol requires Northern Ireland to continue to align with EU rules for devices after 1 January 2021. Therefore, the Medical Device Regulation (EU) 2017/745 (MDR) and the in vitro Diagnostic Medical Device Regulation (EU) 2017/746 (IVDR) will apply in Northern Ireland from 26 May 2021, and 26 May 2022 respectively, in line with the EU’s implementation timeline.
All clinical investigations requiring application to the MHRA (which involve a site in Northern Ireland) must be submitted to the MHRA in line with the requirements of EU MDR 2017/745. Note: This single application will also cover any sites proposed in Great Britain in addition to site(s) in Northern Ireland for the same clinical investigation.
For clinical investigations involving a site in Northern Ireland, please use this flow chart and accompanying guidance to determine if you are required to submit an application to MHRA.
The following sections provide guidance for these applications and the requirements for amendments and post market studies involving sites in Northern Ireland.
Assessment of CI Applications
When the MHRA has received your documents and validated them, we will write to you within 10 calendar days to confirm that the application is valid and the assessment has started or we will let you know if there are any issues. If there are any issues raised we will confirm these in writing and provide a 10 calendar day deadline for a response. The assessment will not start until we have received a valid response. If, after receipt of the response, the application is still considered to be invalid, or the 10 day deadline has expired, we will write to confirm this within 5 calendar days.
Day 1 of the MHRA assessment is taken as being the date that we confirm that we have received a valid application. During the assessment experts will assess the safety and performance of your device as well as the design of the clinical investigation to be carried out. The MHRA will write to you if we require further information. It is essential that you contact the MHRA as soon as possible if you require clarification. If there are possible grounds for refusing authorisation, where possible, we will arrange a teleconference for a better understanding and to find a resolution within the assessment period.
Depending on whether we consult experts, the MHRA will inform you of our decision within 45 or 65 calendar days as per the EU MDR. This period will be suspended in the event that we request additional information for a maximum of 7 calendar days for each request, up to a maximum of 3 requests. Any further requests will not result in a clock stop.
A letter will be sent to you by the final day or before with a decision as to whether or not you can carry out the proposed clinical investigation.
Serious adverse event (SAE) reporting
This section concerns clinical investigations being conducted in Great Britain only. Please see the separate section below for studies involving Northern Ireland.
All serious adverse events from the clinical investigation must be fully recorded and notified to the MHRA.
These can be provided using either the MEDDEV 2.7/3 SAE reporting table, or the MDCG 2020-10/2 SAE reporting table, as long as all SAEs are included. Please submit an SAE reporting form in the new MORE portal with your completed table attached.
See details on how to register for the MORE portal.
MEDDEV 2.7/3 also contains further guidance on clinical investigation reporting in Great Britain.
Amendments/modifications
Once you’ve received authorisation from us to conduct the clinical investigation within Northern Ireland, you must notify the MHRA of all proposed modifications to the investigation before they are implemented. You must wait until we send you another letter of authorisation before you implement substantial modifications. Depending on whether we consult experts, we will issue our decision within 38 or 45 calendar days.
You must tell us about all modifications, but only those considered to be substantial will require authorisation by the MHRA.
Substantial modification includes:
- changes to the medical device under investigation
- changes to the design or methodology of the clinical investigation, or to background information
- changes to the procedures undertaken by participants
- changes to the risk/benefit assessment for the study
- significant changes to study documentation such as clinical investigation plan, investigator’s brochure, participant information sheets, consent forms, letters to GPs or other clinicians, information sheets for relatives or carers
- appointment of a new chief investigator
- inclusion of a new trial site (not listed in the original application)
- appointment of a new principal investigator at a trial site
- temporary halt of a study to protect participants from harm, and the planned restart of a study following a temporary halt
- a change to the definition of the end of the study
- extension of the study beyond the period specified in the application form
- any other significant change to the protocol
- changes requested by an ethics committee
For non-substantial modifications you only need to notify us to ensure our records are up to date. If upon review of the proposed non-substantial modification, the MHRA consider it to fall within the substantial category, the MHRA will inform the sponsor, and the proposed modification should not be implemented until an MHRA authorisation is received.
Non-substantial modifications are changes that are unlikely to have a substantial impact on the safety, health or rights of the subjects or on the robustness or reliability of the clinical data generated by the investigation and include:
- a change of sponsor(s) or sponsor’s legal representative
- a change to the insurance or indemnity arrangements for the study
- minor changes to the protocol or other study documentation, e.g. correcting typographical errors, updating contact points, minor clarifications
- changes to the chief investigator’s research team
- changes to the research team at particular trial sites (other than appointment of a new principal investigator)
- changes in funding arrangements
- minor changes in the documentation used by the research team for recording study data
- changes in the logistical arrangements for storing or transporting samples
Post market studies
You must notify the MHRA of all clinical investigations conducted in Northern Ireland involving CE marked devices that also involve procedures additional to the normal conditions of use of the device, that are also invasive or burdensome.
The notification must be made at least 30 days prior to commencing the study.
When you notify us of these clinical investigations, we need the following information:
- application form
- investigator’s brochure
- clinical investigation plan or protocol
- signed statement
- REC opinion
- proof of insurance cover or indemnification of subjects
- PIS and IC
- arrangement to ensure protection and confidentiality of personal data
- details of the technical documentation (risk analysis, test reports) kept available
Applications are submitted electronically using the Integrated Research Application System (IRAS).
Early termination or temporary halt of clinical investigation
Sponsors are required to notify the MHRA of the temporary halt or early termination of a clinical investigation and provide a justification within 15 days, or 24 hours if the decision was taken on safety grounds. The clinical investigation report and summary must be provided within 3 months for such studies that are temporarily halted or terminated early.
Medical devices: clinical investigations and performance studies in Northern Ireland
Information about changes to the operation of certain clinical investigations and performance studies in Northern Ireland.
Certain clinical investigations and performance studies that take place in Northern Ireland require the sponsors to be established either in Northern Ireland or the EU or to have a legal representative established in Northern Ireland or the EU.
The rules that apply (Medical Device Regulation (Regulation 2017/745) (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostics Regulation (Regulation 2017/746) (IVDR) allow the UK to disapply these rules.
This requirement applies if the investigation or study is only taking place within its territory and not in the EU. Therefore, the MHRA is disapplying the requirement for the sponsor or their legal representative of a clinical investigation or performance study to be established in Northern Ireland or the EU, provided all of the following conditions are met:
- the investigation or study must also be taking place in both Northern Ireland and Great Britain
- the investigation or study must not be taking place in an EU member state
- the sponsor must be either established in or have a written agreement with a legal representative in Great Britain, who is responsible for ensuring compliance with the sponsor’s obligations in the MDR or IVDR
- the sponsor must establish a contact person in Northern Ireland for the clinical investigation or performance study, who will be the addressee for all communications with the sponsor provided for in MDR or IVDR
- any communication with that contact person is deemed to be communication with the sponsor
All remaining requirements under the MDR and IVDR apply. This guidance will take immediate effect.
For further information, contact the MHRA on info@mhra.gov.uk.
In Vitro Diagnostic Medical Devices (IVDs)
Unless an exemption applies, all IVD devices being placed on the market or put into service in the UK are required to have the relevant mark of conformity (i.e. UKCA, CE or UKNI).
This includes IVD devices used in clinical trials of medicines (CTIMPs) to stratify patients for inclusion/exclusion in the trial or stratified to a cohort within a trial.
At the time of the clinical trial application, where clinical performance of the IVD device is yet to be demonstrated, for CTIMPs taking place in GB, the IVD device must have demonstrated evidence supplied to the MHRA for the analytical performance of the IVD (e.g. detection of a biomarker) as summary reports of each study or protocol. This will include reagents, equipment, calibrators, controls and software. For use of IVD devices in CTIMPs conducted in Northern Ireland, refer to guidance available on Clinical investigations and performance studies in Northern Ireland.
Alternatively, if the analytical performance study has not been conducted, the Sponsor must provide the MHRA with a Tabular Summary (MS Word Document, 49.7 KB) description of the analytical methods including acceptance limits and parameters for performing validation. Please supply the contents requested without modifying the template structure.
Trials which determine the clinical performance of the assay will need to be registered as IVD performance evaluation studies.
See also guidance on in vitro diagnostic medical devices: guidance on legislation.
Special circumstances for healthcare establishments
You do not need to notify the MHRA of a clinical investigation if:
- you have manufactured the medical device in-house for your own patients with no objective to place it on the market
You may need to notify the MHRA of a clinical investigation if:
- you want to provide a medical device to another organisation, that up until now has been manufactured in-house for patients, for data to support safety and performance of a commercial product.
See
which may be relevant to you.Health Research Authority (HRA) and Health and Care Research Wales (HCRW) Approval
HRA and HCRW approval applies to all project-based research taking place in the NHS in England and Wales. It brings together the assessment of governance and legal compliance, undertaken by dedicated HRA and HCRW staff, with the independent Research Ethics Committee (REC) opinion provided through the UK Research Ethics Service.
It replaces the need for local checks of legal compliance and related matters by each participating organisation in England and Wales. For information on how to prepare and submit an application for HRA and HCRW Approval, refer to the HRA website.
More information
For more details on classifications, see MEDDEV 2.4/1 for guidance on classifications.
If you have any questions before submitting your notification, email info@mhra.gov.uk.
Updates to this page
Published 18 December 2014Last updated 17 December 2024 + show all updates
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Updates to section 'Northern Ireland'. Includes attachments for 'flow chart' and 'accompanying guidance' and revised wording underneath SAE reporting.
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Information about serious adverse event (SAE) has been updated.
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Added link to 'IRAS User Guide - Amendments'.
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Updated section on 'Amendments' to reflect changes to the process.
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Updated 'In Vitro Diagnostic Medical Devices (IVDs)' section,
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Updated to include new QSR template
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New section 'Regulatory advice meetings' added to this page.
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Updates to clarify the fees and payment process, addition of guidance on early terminations and temporary halts in GB and NI and clarification that Annex XVI applications cannot be accepted in GB.
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Updated guidance for manufacturers PDF attachment
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Added links to: - guidance for manufacturers on clinical investigations - information for clinical investigators
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Added Combined review of a CTIMP and Medical Device section and accompanying guidance Combined IMP Device guidance
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'Electrical guidance for clinical investigations' has been uploaded
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Updated to add hyperlink on submission guidance
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Added template for submitting Quarterly Summary Reports.
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Added a PDF on our electrical guidance for clinical investigations. Added information to the 'Amendments' section.
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Added document 'Tabular Summary input (template) for non marked IVD devices'.
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Updated to include Medical devices: clinical investigations and performance studies in Northern Ireland replacing Temporary Disapplication of Sponsors and Legal Representatives in Northern Ireland.
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Added new section, Temporary Disapplication of Sponsors and Legal Representatives in Northern Ireland.
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Added information on fees payable in relation to clinical investigation and amendments to clinical investigations.
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Updated information on 'MHRA / HRA Coordinated pathway' - Resuming Monday 22 May 2023.
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Added Validation Checklist text and document
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Updated information on how to submit the SAE reporting form.
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Clinical investigation numbers for 2021 have been included.
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Added section 'Quarterly Summary Reports'
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Added section for "Study deviations" and related XLS.
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Uploaded guidance on the MHRA and HRA coordinated assessment pathway
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Christmas period extended to 10 January
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Information added for notifications for clinical investigation or study amendments between 17 December 2021 and 4 January 2022.
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Added a note about clinical trial applications, where clinical performance of the IVD is yet to be demonstrated.
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The guidance is being updated due to the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR) coming into effect in Northern Ireland from 26 May. It provides technical details for clinical investigations in Northern Ireland.
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Added information on the number of valid clinical investigation applications that have been reviewed by year.
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A new statistical considerations PDF has been added to reflect the end of the Brexit transition period
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Updated biological safety assessment pdf
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Added revised information about Health Research Authority (HRA) and Health and Care Research Wales (HCRW) Approval. Also added new information about the Coordinated assessment pathway pilot.
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This page has been updated due to the end of the Brexit transition period.
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This page has been updated due to the end of the transition period
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Updated with a message around amendments over the 2020 Christmas period.
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Added information about how the MHRA will review clinical investigations submitted before 26 May 2020, and on or after 26 May 2020.
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Published an updated version of the 'guidance for manufacturers'.
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We have added in a Christmas period notice for 2019.
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The Biological Safety Assessment PDF has been updated.
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Added a link to new guidance on medical devices regulation in a no deal scenario.
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Updated page - new wording and Guidance attachments
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Inserted advanced notice of a change section
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Information about rules of processing notifications about clinical investigations by MHRA during period of Christmas 2018
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New version of guidance for manufacturers published
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Changed MHRA address.
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Update to recent changes section
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New heading "Upcoming changes"
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Added information about the IRAS forms and about providing MHRA with advanced notice of your intention to submit a clinical investigation.
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Added note to provide MHRA with advanced notice of your intention to submit a clinical investigation.
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Information on processing times over the Christmas 2017 period added to the page.
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New 'statistical considerations' document added to the page.
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New section about IVDs added to the page.
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Updated guidance document
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Information about new requirement to pay fees for amendments published
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Updated guidance
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Added information about Christmas period 2016
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Added clarification around the start of the 60-day assessment timeframe.
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Information on Health Research Authority Approval
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Updated guidance for manufactures on legislation for clinical investigations of medical devices.
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First published.