31. März 2026
A European Perspective #1 – 10 von 9 Insights
A European Perspective #1
In December 2025, the European Commission published a proposal to amend the EU Medical Device Regulation (EU) 2017/745 (MDR) and In-Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (EU) 2017/746 (IVDR). The proposal represents one of the most significant planned reforms of the EU medical device regulatory framework since the regulations entered into force. It introduces a broad range of measures aimed at strengthening the competitiveness of the EU market (including through a reduced regulatory burden), promoting innovation, and improving device availability for patients.
The broad scope of the proposed changes requires a detailed analysis of their business impact. While TaylorWessing’s article here provides a more comprehensive overview of the proposals, this executive summary highlights selected key changes from the perspective of medical device manufacturers:
The proposal is currently at an early level of the legislative process (preparatory phase in the European Parliament). This means that significant changes are possible, and that formal adoption is unlikely before 2027.
Medical device companies should closely monitor legislative developments and consider initiating internal gap assessments against the proposed framework. Given the scale of the proposed changes, a comprehensive legal analysis tailored to the specific product portfolio will be required.
Such analysis should include a review of the current portfolio and an assessment of risks and opportunities, particularly in the light of changes to the certification and classification regimes, including identification of devices that may benefit from simplified clinical and post-market requirements.
Particular attention should be paid to specific product categories, such as single-use devices or medical device software, where the proposed changes are likely to have the most significant impact. Companies should also assess whether new pathways and innovation-focused mechanisms may be applicable.
A European Perspective #1 | The EU’s largest pharmaceutical law reform in over 20 years introduces a new regulatory exclusivity framework, revised orphan drug incentives and an antimicrobial voucher. Strategic exclusivity planning will become essential for pharmaceutical companies.
15. April 2026
von Irina Rebin
A European Perspective #1 | The Commission’s proposed MDR/IVDR reform introduces substantial changes to certification, classification and compliance frameworks. Medical device companies should assess potential im-pacts early and prepare for a shifting regulatory landscape.
15. April 2026
von Bartosz Świdrak
A European Perspective #1 | 2026 will be an integration year for AI in the healthcare sector. The AI Act will enter its implementation phase, while the Digital Omnibus introduces targeted simplifications. For life sciences companies, this means structurally aligning AI governance, data protection and product regulation.
31. März 2026
A European Perspective #1 | EU Biotech Act: Faster Clinical Trial Approvals Ahead | The European Commission’s proposed Biotech Act aims to streamline clinical trial procedures, shorten approval timelines, and harmonise data protection rules across the EU. If adopted, the reform could significantly accelerate multinational clinical research in the EU.
15. April 2026
von Irina Rebin
A European Perspective #1 | AUSTRIA | The Austrian Constitutional Court holds that preventive egg retrieval without medical indication falls within the protection of Article 8 ECHR. A blanket prohibition is disproportionate; the legislature must introduce a new regulatory framework by 31 March 2027.
1. April 2026
A European Perspective #1 | FRANCE | The French Supreme Court confirms a broad interpretation of commercial agent status. A key ruling increasing requalification risks and potential termination indemnity exposure for manufacturers and distributors.
1. April 2026
A European Perspective #1 | GERMANY | The Frankfurt am Main Regional Court confirms: No reduction in the burden of proof (presumption of causality) pursuant to Section 84 (2) of the German Medicines Act (AMG) for IMP (not even by analogy) and no liability on the part of the sponsor in the event of (insufficient) risk information provided by the investigating physician.
1. April 2026
von Irina Rebin
A European Perspective #1 | HUNGARY | From 1 January 2026, Hungary allows controlled access to anonymised data held in its national digital health infrastructure for AI development. This may create new opportunities for life scienc-es innovation, while raising complex ethics, privacy and compliance questions.
1. April 2026
A European Perspective #1 | POLAND | The CJEU has found Poland’s prohibition on pharmacy advertising incompatible with EU law, effectively rendering the current provision unenforceable. Companies should monitor upcoming legislative changes and reassess promotional strategies in the interim.
1. April 2026
von Bartosz Świdrak
Available in Polish
von Bartosz Świdrak
Available in Polish
von Bartosz Świdrak
Available in Polish
von Bartosz Świdrak