§ 02 — Comparison

Compare regulatory pathways side-by-side

Authority & dossier

Regulatory authority
  • ChileISP / ANAMED
  • United StatesFDA
  • European UnionEMA
English submissions
  • ChileNo
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
CTD accepted
  • ChileYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
eCTD accepted
  • ChileNo
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
Reliance pathway
  • ChileAvailable
  • United StatesNone
  • European UnionAvailable
Reference agencies
  • ChileFDA, EMA, MHRA, Swissmedic +3
  • United States
  • European Union

Lead pathway (timeline & fees) — Registro Sanitario — Vía Ordinaria (Standard) · New Drug Application — 505(b)(1) · Centralised Procedure

Pathway name
  • ChileRegistro Sanitario — Vía Ordinaria (Standard)
  • United StatesNew Drug Application — 505(b)(1)
  • European UnionCentralised Procedure
Approval timeline
  • Chile240–480 days
  • United States304–365 days
  • European Union210–277 days
Application fee
  • ChileCLP 6,500,000
  • United StatesUSD 4,310,002
  • European UnionEUR 358,800
Annual renewal
  • ChileCLP 0
  • United StatesUSD 416,734
  • European UnionEUR 122,500
Local representative
  • ChileRequired
  • United StatesNot required
  • European UnionRequired
Local manufacturing
  • ChileNot required
  • United StatesNot required
  • European UnionNot required
GMP inspection
  • ChileRequired
  • United StatesRequired
  • European UnionRequired

MAH & local presence

Local entity required
  • ChileYes
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
Local responsible person
  • ChileYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
RP role
  • ChileA Director Técnico (registered químico farmacéutico) must be designated for each pharmaceutical establishment per DS 3/2010. A Responsable de Farmacovigilancia must be designated under Norma Técnica 140 (2018) with responsibility for ICSR submission and periodic safety reports to CENIMEF.
  • United StatesUS Agent: a person residing or maintaining a place of business in the US, designated to act on behalf of the foreign establishment for FDA communications, including notification of inspections.
  • European UnionQualified Person Responsible for Pharmacovigilance (QPPV) — must reside and operate in the EU/EEA — is responsible for the establishment and maintenance of the pharmacovigilance system. A Qualified Person (QP) in the EU/EEA performs batch certification under Article 51 of Directive 2001/83/EC. Local Contact Person for pharmacovigilance required in each Member State where the product is marketed (since 2012 GVP).

Accelerated pathways

Designations available
  • Chile2 designations
  • United States6 designations
  • European Union6 designations
Examples
  • ChileAutorización Provisional / Uso de Emergencia, Vía Abreviada (Reliance fast-track)
  • United StatesPriority Review, Breakthrough Therapy Designation, Accelerated Approval — Subpart H/E +3
  • European UnionAccelerated Assessment, Conditional Marketing Authorisation, Authorisation under Exceptional Circumstances +3

Post-approval lifecycle

Variations framework
  • ChileVariations classified by ANAMED into Modificaciones Mayores (Type II equivalent — major safety/efficacy or CMC changes), Modificaciones Menores (Type IB equivalent) and Modificaciones Administrativas (Type IA equivalent / notifications). Framework set by DS 3/2010 and complementary Normas Técnicas.
  • United StatesFDA classifies post-approval changes as: Annual Reportable, Changes Being Effected (CBE-0 immediate, CBE-30 with 30-day pre-implementation notice), and Prior Approval Supplements (PAS) — the most significant changes requiring FDA approval before implementation. Major manufacturing or labelling changes typically require a PAS.
  • European UnionCommission Regulation (EC) 1234/2008 establishes four categories: Type IA (minor — Do and Tell, 12-month notification), Type IAIN (minor — immediate notification), Type IB (minor — Tell, Wait, and Do, 30-day default), Type II (major — prior approval, 60–90 days), and Extensions (Annex I changes — full review). Worksharing procedures consolidate variations across multiple authorisations.
Renewal cycle
  • ChileRegistro Sanitario valid for 5 years (quinquennial). Renewal application (renovación) must be filed before expiry and includes updated quality, safety, efficacy and pharmacovigilance information.
  • United StatesFDA does not require periodic renewal of NDAs or BLAs — approvals remain in effect indefinitely subject to compliance, payment of annual program fees, and post-marketing requirements. Annual reports are required.
  • European UnionInitial 5-year renewal — application 9 months before expiry. After the first renewal, MA is granted for unlimited duration unless the CHMP/NCA, on justified grounds relating to pharmacovigilance, decides on one additional 5-year renewal.
Pharmacovigilance
  • ChilePharmacovigilance regulated by Norma Técnica 140 (2018) — Sistema Nacional de Farmacovigilancia. MAHs must operate a national PV system, designate a Responsable de Farmacovigilancia, submit ICSRs (15-day for serious unlisted) to CENIMEF via the RAM-electronic platform, file Periodic Safety Update Reports per ICH E2C(R2), and maintain Risk Management Plans for new molecules and biologics.
  • United StatesMandatory expedited reporting of serious unexpected ADRs within 15 calendar days; periodic safety reports (PADERs/PAERs) for the first 3 years post-approval, then annually. PSURs in ICH E2C(R2) format accepted in lieu of PADERs by agreement. FAERS database receives spontaneous reports. Post-Marketing Requirements (PMRs) and Commitments (PMCs) tracked publicly.
  • European UnionComprehensive PV framework under Directive 2010/84/EU and Regulation (EU) 1235/2010, codified in Good Pharmacovigilance Practices (GVP). Pharmacovigilance System Master File (PSMF) required. Periodic Safety Update Reports (PSURs) on EU-harmonised birth-date list. Risk Management Plans for all new MAs and significant variations. Suspected serious ADR reporting to EudraVigilance within 15 days. Black triangle (▼) for additional monitoring of selected products.

Unlicensed access

Named Patient Supply
  • ChileAvailable
  • United StatesAvailable
  • European UnionAvailable
Compassionate Use
  • ChileAvailable
  • United StatesAvailable
  • European UnionAvailable
Emergency Import
  • ChileAvailable
  • United StatesAvailable
  • European UnionAvailable
Parallel Import
  • ChileNot permitted
  • United StatesNot permitted
  • European UnionPermitted

Clinical trials

CTA approval
  • ChileRequired
  • United StatesRequired
  • European UnionRequired
Ethics approval
  • ChileYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
CTA timeline
  • Chile120–180 days
  • United States30–30 days
  • European Union60–106 days
GCP standard
  • ChileNorma Técnica 57 — Buenas Prácticas Clínicas (aligned with ICH-GCP E6)
  • United StatesICH E6(R3) (adopted via FDA guidance January 2025); 21 CFR 312, 314, 50, 56
  • European UnionICH E6(R3) — Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/2748 transposing R3, applicable from 23 July 2025

Pricing & reimbursement

Price regulation
  • ChileFree pricing
  • United StatesFree pricing
  • European UnionRegulated
Reference pricing
  • ChileNo
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
HTA required
  • ChileYes
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
HTA body
  • ChileMINSAL — Departamento de Evaluación de Tecnologías Sanitarias (ETESA) and the Comisión de Recomendación Priorizada (CRP) for Ricarte Soto
  • United StatesICER (Institute for Clinical and Economic Review) — independent, non-binding
  • European UnionEU HTA Coordination Group (EUnetHTA legacy); national HTA bodies (NICE, HAS, G-BA/IQWiG, AIFA, AEMPS, etc.)