Article

From AI to regulatory layering and convergence: Key takeaways from RAPS Euro Convergence 2026

  • Tiina Riihimäki, PhD.

AI’s role in regulatory submissions and conformity assessment a central theme in RAPS Euro Convergence
Regulatory work in Europe is no longer defined by individual frameworks such as the European Union’s Medical Device Regulation or In Vitro Diagnostic Medical Device Regulation (IVDR). It is increasingly shaped by how organizations manage overlapping—and sometimes misaligned—regulatory systems simultaneously.

This year’s RAPS Euro Convergence, held in Lisbon from 5-8 May, strongly reinforced this reality. While much of the content felt familiar at first glance, the discussions revealed a shift from “understanding regulations” to “operating effectively in complexity.”

What emerged very clearly is that the primary challenge is no longer regulatory interpretation—but operational execution across fragmented frameworks, stakeholders, and timelines.

This year was also particularly meaningful for Cencora. We had a strong presence across the program with three presentations and speakers contributing to discussions across the IVD, pharmaceutical, and medical device tracks.

The topics reflected the increasing complexity of the regulatory landscape—from multiplex IVD performance evaluation to combined studies to post–Notified Body Opinion (NBOp) lifecycle management. It was encouraging to see these discussions resonate with the broader themes across the conference.

Three core themes stood out throughout the event.

Core theme:

AI is everywhere—but still more promise than fully operational reality

Artificial intelligence was a recurring topic across sessions, particularly in relation to safety, responsibility, and its role in regulatory submissions and conformity assessment. The direction is clear: AI will become part of regulatory workflows, but the level of maturity across the ecosystem remains uneven.

Discussions focused less on how to use AI effectively and more on how to control and govern its use. Even in areas such as conformity assessment, experts emphasized that responsibility cannot be delegated. Manufacturers and authorities remain accountable for outcomes, regardless of automation. At the same time, developments outside Europe show that adoption is already progressing. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has introduced agentic AI capabilities to support complex regulatory processes, such as pre-market reviews, post-market surveillance, inspections, and compliance activities.1

In parallel, new regulatory approaches are emerging to address the unique challenges of AI-based technologies. During one session, Regulatory Sandboxes in Practice: Turning AI Airlock Learnings into Policy, Regulatory and Industry Strategy, speakers shared how The UK MHRA AI Airlock program has provided a regulatory sandbox for innovators and regulators to test AI as a medical device in controlled environments, generating insights that will shape future frameworks.

The EU perspective appears more cautious, but not static. Discussions at the conference highlighted a clear shift among notified bodies—from observing AI to actively preparing for its integration. Sessions on AI-powered conformity assessment explored concrete use cases, such as automated document management, intelligent review of large technical documentation sets, and predictive analytics to support assessment activities. These developments are closely linked to the European Commission’s targeted MDR/IVDR revision2, which aims to improve predictability and efficiency in certification processes.

Despite this momentum, AI adoption remains at an early stage. Participants raised important questions about validation of AI tools, the development of robust quality assurance frameworks, and how to maintain independence, objectivity, and confidentiality within AI-enabled processes. What came across in AI discussions was that the real challenge is moving from controlled pilots and concepts to scalable, routine use within a highly regulated environment. For manufacturers, we believe this creates an important consideration. While AI-enabled conformity assessment is not yet standard, expectations around structured, consistent, and increasingly machine-readable documentation are likely to evolve quickly. Preparing for this shift now may become a competitive advantage.

Core theme:

Focus shifts from MDR/IVDR to a complex web of regulations

There was a noticeable shift in how regulatory complexity is being framed during the conference. MDR and IVDR are no longer the “new challenge” they once were, since most organizations have now built baseline understanding and capability. Instead, there is a shift to what renowned life sciences lawyer Erik Vollebregt of Axon Lawyers, who presented at several sessions, refers to as “regulatory lasagna”, reflecting the complexity and layering of multiple regulatory frameworks being applied simultaneously, often without full alignment. The layering of regulatory frameworks fundamentally changes the nature of regulatory work. It is no longer a linear process aligned to a single framework, but a coordination exercise across overlapping regimes, timelines, and stakeholders.

This becomes particularly visible in digital areas. During a session titled Interoperability of Medical Devices in a Connected World – From Regulatory to Reality, speakers discussed how interoperability requirements for Software as a Medical Device will require manufacturers to address not only MDR expectations, but also broader data and digital legislation. These include the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the European Health Data Space (EHDS), and the EU Data Act. Translating these requirements into coherent design, validation, and documentation strategies remains a significant challenge and often results in inconsistent submissions and delays.

A second layer of complexity comes from horizontal EU legislation, as discussed by Vollebregt and Darren Thain of medical devices company Smith+Nephew during the session titled Environmental Convergence: Horizontal EU Requirements Reshaping Medical Device and IVD Regulation. Environmental regulations—including the RoHS Directive (Restriction of Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Equipment)3 and REACH (the regulation on the registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals)4 —are increasingly intersecting with MDR and IVDR. These do not sit outside device regulation; they directly influence product design, materials, technical documentation, and lifecycle management.

One comment from the audience captured the operational impact particularly well. A participant highlighted that a single legal manufacturer may have multiple notified bodies assessing different parts of their portfolio, each operating in silos. When combined with overlapping regulatory requirements—environmental, digital, cybersecurity, and medical—this creates a situation where manufacturers are effectively responsible for ensuring alignment across both regulatory frameworks and multiple assessors, the audience member noted. In practice, this shifts the burden of integration from the regulatory system to the manufacturer.

The takeaway from the discussions is that regulatory work is becoming less about compliance with individual rules, and more about ensuring that complex systems function consistently and effectively.

Core theme:

Pharma legislation and combination products: convergence is accelerating

Another strong signal from the conference was the ongoing transformation of pharmaceutical legislation and its implications for combination products. There was significant focus on the reform of EU pharmaceutical legislation—the first major overhaul in more than 20 years.5 The aim is to modernize the framework, improve access to medicines, support innovation, and streamline procedures, with an increasing emphasis on speed and efficiency.

Alongside legislative reform, the discussion also focused on evolving regulatory collaboration. Initiatives such as FDA–EMA parallel scientific advice6 aim to align expectations earlier in development, particularly for complex and combination products, supporting more efficient global development strategies.
Technical evolution is equally important, speakers noted. The revision of ICH M4Q (R2)7 introduces a more structured, lifecycle-oriented approach to pharmaceutical data, reflecting a broader shift toward digitalization and knowledge-based regulatory systems. Taken together, these developments signal that regulatory systems are evolving not only in their requirements, but also in how they process, structure, and assess information.

Discussions emphasized the distinct challenge these present for combination products, which must operate across regulatory frameworks that are increasingly connected, but not yet harmonized. This was also reflected in our own session “Life After NBOp: Navigating Post-Market Compliance and Mastering Change Management for Combination Products”. Device-related changes do not simply fit within pharmaceutical variation systems. After NBOp, each change must be assessed from both a medicinal product and device perspective—with clear justification and coordination.

In practice, this means that regulatory strategy for combination products can no longer be developed within a single framework—it requires early alignment across both medicinal and device regulatory pathways. Combination products are therefore not only technically complex, but structurally complex as well. Increasingly, this complexity will become the norm rather than the exception.

Final reflection

Perhaps the most important takeaway from this year’s RAPS Euro Convergence is that regulatory affairs is transitioning from a compliance function into a system orchestration role. AI is entering the space, but scaling remains constrained by governance and operational realities. Regulations are multiplying, while the real challenge lies in how complex regulatory systems work together in practice. Pharma and device frameworks are converging, though not yet fully aligned.

At the same time, expectations about speed, consistency, and quality continue to increase. This creates a new reality: Success will depend on managing complexity—across systems, functions, and regulatory paradigms—rather than on knowing the rules alone.
*Sources suite ci-dessous

About the author:

Tiina Riihimäki, PhD., is Director, Service Line Lead, Medical Device Services Europe, Cencora. Tiina has more than 15 years of experience in academia and in the medical device and diagnostics industry. In addition, she has more than five years of notified body experience, including roles as lead auditor and as a technical/medical assessor. She has also worked in the Medical Device Coordination Group (MDCG) mirror working group as a Team-NB member. 


Clause de non responsabilité :
Les informations fournies dans cet article ne constituent pas des conseils juridiques. Cencora, Inc. encourage vivement les lecteurs à consulter les informations disponibles relatives aux sujets abordés et à s’appuyer sur leur propre expérience et expertise pour prendre des décisions à ce sujet.

 


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Sources


1. FDA Expands Artificial Intelligence Capabilities with Agentic AI Deployment, December 2025. https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-expands-artificial-intelligence-capabilities-agentic-ai-deployment
2. Simpler and more effective rules for medical devices – Commission proposal for a targeted revision of the medical devices regulations. https://health.ec.europa.eu/medical-devices-sector/new-regulations_en
3. Directive 2011/65/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2011 on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment, EUR-Lex. https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:02011L0065-20160715
4. REACH Regulation. https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/chemicals/reach-regulation_en
5. Reform of EU pharmaceutical legislation. https://health.ec.europa.eu/medicinal-products/reform-eu-pharmaceutical-legislation_en
6. General principles, EMA-FDA parallel scientific advice (human medicinal products), July 2021, EMA. https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/other/general-principles-european-medicines-agency-food-and-drug-administration-parallel-scientific-advice_en.pdf
7. ICH M4Q(R2) Guideline on the Common Technical Document for the registration of pharmaceuticals for human use: Quality, June 2025. https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/scientific-guideline/ich-m4qr2-guideline-common-technical-document-registration-pharmaceuticals-human-use-quality-step-2b_en.pdf

 

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