Β§ 02 β€” Comparison

Compare regulatory pathways side-by-side

Authority & dossier

Regulatory authority
  • PhilippinesFDA Philippines (CDRR)
  • United StatesFDA
  • European UnionEMA
English submissions
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
CTD accepted
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
eCTD accepted
  • PhilippinesNo
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
Reliance pathway
  • PhilippinesAvailable
  • United StatesNone
  • European UnionAvailable
Reference agencies
  • PhilippinesFDA (US), EMA, MHRA (UK), Health Canada +4
  • United Statesβ€”
  • European Unionβ€”

Lead pathway (timeline & fees) β€” Initial Registration β€” Standard Review Β· New Drug Application β€” 505(b)(1) Β· Centralised Procedure

Pathway name
  • PhilippinesInitial Registration β€” Standard Review
  • United StatesNew Drug Application β€” 505(b)(1)
  • European UnionCentralised Procedure
Approval timeline
  • Philippines365–730 days
  • United States304–365 days
  • European Union210–277 days
Application fee
  • PhilippinesPHP 30,000
  • United StatesUSD 4,310,002
  • European UnionEUR 358,800
Annual renewal
  • PhilippinesPHP 0
  • United StatesUSD 416,734
  • European UnionEUR 122,500
Local representative
  • PhilippinesRequired
  • United StatesNot required
  • European UnionRequired
Local manufacturing
  • PhilippinesNot required
  • United StatesNot required
  • European UnionNot required
GMP inspection
  • PhilippinesRequired
  • United StatesRequired
  • European UnionRequired

MAH & local presence

Local entity required
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
Local responsible person
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
RP role
  • PhilippinesLTO holders must designate a Qualified Person (typically a registered pharmacist) responsible for the licensed premises, and a Qualified Person for Pharmacovigilance (QPPV) as the contact for FDA's Pharmacovigilance Division.
  • 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) β€” must reside and operate in the EU/EEA β€” 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
  • Philippines3 designations
  • United States6 designations
  • European Union6 designations
Examples
  • PhilippinesFacilitated Registration Pathway β€” Abridged & Verification Review, Emergency Use Authorisation (EUA), Conditional / Monitored Release Registration
  • United StatesPriority Review, Breakthrough Therapy Designation, Accelerated Approval β€” Subpart H/E +3
  • European UnionAccelerated Assessment, Conditional Marketing Authorisation, Authorisation under Exceptional Circumstances +3

Post-approval lifecycle

Variations framework
  • PhilippinesVariations classified per FDA Circulars (aligned with ASEAN Variation Guideline) into Major Variation (FDA approval), Minor Variation (prior approval or notification) and Administrative Variation. Renewal Data Capture (RDC) modernised the renewal workflow under the eRegistration system.
  • 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) β€” 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 β€” Do and Tell, 12-month notification), Type IAIN (minor β€” immediate notification), Type IB (minor β€” Tell, Wait, and Do, 30-day default), Type II (major β€” prior approval, 60–90 days), and Extensions (Annex I changes β€” full review). Worksharing procedures consolidate variations across multiple authorisations.
Renewal cycle
  • PhilippinesCPR is initially valid for 5 years and renewable for 5 years; renewal via Renewal Data Capture (RDC) under the modified eRegistration system, with up-to-date CMC, safety and labelling information.
  • United StatesFDA does not require periodic renewal of NDAs or BLAs β€” 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 β€” 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
  • PhilippinesFDA's Pharmacovigilance Division coordinates national ADR reporting (the Philippines is a member of the WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring, Uppsala). CPR holders must submit PSURs aligned to ICH E2C(R2), report serious ADRs within statutory timelines, and maintain a Risk Management Plan (RMP) for new active substances and vaccines.
  • 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 (β–Ό) for additional monitoring of selected products.

Unlicensed access

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

Clinical trials

CTA approval
  • PhilippinesRequired
  • United StatesRequired
  • European UnionRequired
Ethics approval
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesYes
  • European UnionYes
CTA timeline
  • Philippines60–120 days
  • United States30–30 days
  • European Union60–106 days
GCP standard
  • PhilippinesICH E6(R2) GCP; FDA Philippines Good Clinical Practice guidelines and Philippine Council for Health Research and Development (PCHRD) National Ethical Guidelines
  • United StatesICH E6(R3) (adopted via FDA guidance January 2025); 21 CFR 312, 314, 50, 56
  • European UnionICH E6(R3) β€” Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/2748 transposing R3, applicable from 23 July 2025

Pricing & reimbursement

Price regulation
  • PhilippinesRegulated
  • United StatesFree pricing
  • European UnionRegulated
Reference pricing
  • PhilippinesNo
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
HTA required
  • PhilippinesYes
  • United StatesNo
  • European UnionYes
HTA body
  • PhilippinesHealth Technology Assessment Council (HTAC) under the Universal Health Care Act (RA 11223, 2019)
  • United StatesICER (Institute for Clinical and Economic Review) β€” independent, non-binding
  • European UnionEU HTA Coordination Group (EUnetHTA legacy); national HTA bodies (NICE, HAS, G-BA/IQWiG, AIFA, AEMPS, etc.)