Guidance

Medicines: apply for a variation to your marketing authorisation

Apply for changes to your marketing authorisation, including minor variations type IA and IB, major variations type II and extensions.

Overview

Variations are either:

  • an administrative change such as a change of company name and/or address
  • a change to the characteristics of a product that can affect its quality, such as a change to its composition
  • a change to the safety, efficacy or pharmacovigilance of the product

Changes are classed as major (type II) or minor. Minor changes are either type 1A or 1B.

You can apply for:

  • a single change to one marketing authorisation (MA)
  • multiple changes to one or more products and/or MAs

Marketing authorisation types

From 1 January 2021, the following market authorisation types are possible in the UK:

PL – authorised for use in UK

  • as a purely national UK-wide MA
  • as part of an MR/DC procedure involving Northern Ireland as CMS, but a UK-wide MA

PLGB – authorised for use in Great Britain only (England, Scotland and Wales)

  • as a purely Great Britain national
  • following conversion of a centrally authorised product (CAP)
  • under the unfettered access route (MAH needs to be established in Northern Ireland and any product must access Great Britain via Northern Ireland as a qualifying Northern Ireland good)

PLNI - authorised for use in Northern Ireland only

  • as a purely Northern Ireland national
  • as part of an MR/DC procedure including Northern Ireland only

See our guidance on applying for a licence to market a medicine in the UK.

Variations procedures

The variation procedures follow for the different types of marketing authorisations from 1 January 2021 are essentially the same as before that date, where relevant, covered by the appropriate European or national legislation. The procedures depend on who is responsible for leading the assessment:

  • MHRA for purely national variations
  • RMS for MR/DC or Reference Authority for any worksharing variations

Centralised marketing authorisations are authorised for use in Northern Ireland only and any variations to these products will be managed by the EMA.

Until further notice the variations classification guideline, which is a fundamental component of the operation of the variations system, will continue to apply to all types of variations.

Reliance route

You can present variations to purely national MAs (PL, PLGB and PLNI) to the MHRA under the reliance route: following the acceptance of the same change(s) to a related or the same product as part of a European procedure. For example, a CAP variation or an MR/DC variation.

If you are taking this approach, you need to make it clear in the application and relevant evidence, declarations and supporting information. For example, where relevant, provide copies of assessment reports to support the submission. We will publish further in due course.

Minor variations

These are divided into 2 types: IA and IB.

Type IA change

Type IA changes have little or no impact on the quality, safety or efficacy of the product, for example administrative modifications such as:

  • the manufacturer’s name
  • a minor change to a control method
  • deleting details of where the product is packaged

Type IA procedures are classed ‘do-and-tell’, where you should implement the change before you notify MHRA, ensuring that where relevant (non-immediate notification) you submit the application within 12 months. If the implementation period passes 12 months without a variation being made, you should submit a default Type 1B. The MHRA will take up to 30 days to process your application.

See the CMDh variations procedure guidance for the details of this type of change.

Type IAIN change (immediate notification)

Type IAIN is a sub-type of type IA and also classed a ‘do-and-tell’ procedure where MHRA requires ‘immediate notification’ within 2 weeks of the change being implemented. A minor change would usually be type IAIN if it interferes with MHRA’s ability to continuously supervise the product.

All relevant conditions and documentation must be met for a Type IA/IAIN and confirmed in a copy of the classification guideline with either a tick or where not relevant, Not Applicable (N/A).

No ‘requests for further information’ (RFIs) apply to Type IA procedures and there is no fee associated with a National Type IA/IAIN. A full fees list and further information about fees is available fees for licence variation applications.

See the CMDh variations procedure guidance for the details of this type of change.

Type IB change

If the change is more significant than a IA change but is not a type II change or an extension, it is considered a type IB change. MHRA must approve type IB changes before they are made to the product.

See the CMDh variations procedure guidance for the details of this type of change.

Once MHRA has all the necessary documents, it takes up to 30 days to process your initial application. You could be given a further 30 days to respond to any request-for-information letter, which for Type IB are called Notification with Grounds letters (NWG).

These are a conditional determination of a type IB variation, where the applicant has one opportunity to address any deficiencies or omissions.

There is a 30-day deadline to respond to an NWG. Otherwise, we will withdraw or refuse the variation. This also applies if we have received only a partial response by the 30-day deadline.

Major variations (type II)

These changes are more complex and may have a significant impact on the quality, safety and/or efficacy of the product.

MHRA needs to approve major variations before they are made. One example of a major change is adding a new therapeutic indication to a product or updating the current indication (the medical needs the product is used for).

See the CMDh variations procedure guidance for the details of this type of change.

Once MHRA has all the documents, it will take 30, 90 or 120 days to assess your application, depending on how urgent or complex the changes are, excluding time taken to answer questions.

Once MHRA has all the documents, it will take 22-days, (reduced timetable), 60-days (standard timetable) or 90-days (extended complex timetable) to assess your application depending on how urgent or complex the changes are, excluding time taken to answer questions.

With questions (RFIs), assessment timeframes become 30, 90 and 120 days respectively.

The below tabulates the various stages for each type II timetable

Stage 30-day procedure 90-day procedure 120-day procedure
Start assessment-clock on Day 0 Day 0 Day 0
Assessment done      
Approved, refused or withdrawn (procedure finalised) Day 22 Day 60 Day 90
or      
Request for further information (RFI) issued - clock off (procedure suspended) Day 21 Day 59 Day 89
Amended application for applications with an RFI step      
Timescale for receipt of response 10 days 60 days 90 days
Response received-clock on completion of processing (excluding clock off time) By day 30 By day 90 By day 120

A reduced Type II procedure (reduced from 60 days to 30) is for variations concerning safety issues and is agreed between the MHRA and the Marketing Authorisation Holder (MAH) and in general will be changes to the SmPC, requested following the assessment of a Periodic Safety Update Report (PSUR) or at the request of the MHRA Pharmacovigilance Unit.

You should make requests for a reduced timescale to [email protected].

All other forms of submission will be rejected.

Common invalidation errors and pre-submission checklist

We strongly advise you to use our pre-submission checklist (PDF, 26.9KB, 2 pages) which will reduce the likelihood of the submitted application being invalidated or rejected.

The marketing authorisation holder (MAH) is responsible for ensuring that, where relevant, all relevant conditions and documentation are met and the submission of this information and dossiers are the most recent and up to date. Deficient or incorrect documentation can lead to invalidation and/or rejection of the variation.

Extensions

Although extensions are still considered a type of variation, their impact on a product is so significant that you will need to follow the application process to apply for a new MA. The form for this process has a section on extensions.

Extensions can be:

  • changes to the active substance(s), including the salt/ester, isomer or biological active substance
  • changes to strength, pharmaceutical form or route of administration

See annex 1 of the regulations for more information on extensions.

Revised labels, leaflets and/or packaging

If your variation (for example, change of manufacturer) affects details of the labels, leaflets and or packaging (also called livery) of the product, you will need to include the updated versions with your submission to be assessed.

However, you don’t need to submit a variation if there hasn’t been change to the product and you only want to make style changes to the labels, leaflets and/or packaging.

For example, if you’re changing the design of the leaflet and it has no relation to a change in the product, a variation application is not needed. See patient information leaflets for guidance on how to submit these types of changes.

Submit grouped changes (grouping)

You can apply multiple changes to a single product using the ‘grouping’ format, as long as the changes are directly related.

For example, you can make a change to the manufacturing site of the finished product, change in batch size and the manufacturing process to a product. The type of procedure (type IA, IB, II) depends on the extent of the change. You can see details of this in the annex III of the variations Regulation and Schedule 10A of the Human Medicines Regulations.

You can submit grouped changes to an MA with multiple product licences under the European procedure.

If a type IA variation is included in a group with other types of variations,you should not make the type IA change until all changes for that group have been approved.

You can group any type IA and IAIN changes for different marketing authorisations, as long as the group only contains IA and IAIN changes and the changes are the same. All of these changes should be made before you notify MHRA.

Grouping applications for national MAs

For groupings where MAs were granted in the UK through a national procedure only, you will need to apply for grouped changes through the MHRA.

Check the acceptable grouping guidance and the examples of groupings (PDF, 2.5 MB, 12 pages) to see if your grouping is acceptable.

If your desired group of changes isn’t included in the guidance or the examples, you need to complete the grouping template, copy and paste it into the main body of an email and send it to [email protected] before you submit your application. We aim to confirm if your grouping is acceptable within 7 working days.

Variations to multiple products (worksharing)

In some circumstances, you can use the worksharing format if you’re submitting the same type IB or type II change or group of changes to multiple MAs. As far as any product which is authorised in the UK is concerned, only products which are authorised in Northern Ireland either centrally, purely nationally in Northern Ireland only, or as part of an MR/DC procedure can be the subject of worksharing. You should send proposals for worksharing applications to:

  • the European Medicines Agency (EMA) if any of the MAs you want to change were granted under the centralised procedure
  • the Coordination Group for Mutual Recognition and Decentralised Procedures (CMDh) if the MAs were granted under the mutual recognition and/or decentralised procedures and the reference member states were different
  • the reference member state if the authorisations were granted under the mutual recognition and/or decentralised procedure and the reference member state is was the same for each MA
  • the competent authorities for the relevant countries if the MAs were granted under purely national procedures, email [email protected] for the UK

Once we have all the necessary documents, it will usually take 60 days to assess applications although it could take up to 120 days if the variation(s) are more complex or up to 30 days if urgent.

See the best practice guide on worksharing for details on how to submit an application this way.

Composite coordination collection (CCC)

If you want to apply for changes to one or more product licences (licence for each product under a marketing authorisation) that would affect the product information, you can submit a composite coordination collection (CCC). Product information includes the summary of product characteristics, leaflets and labels.

With a CCC you can:

  • submit only one consolidated mock-up of the leaflets and labels with all the changes proposed
  • submit a mixture of variations applications and Article 61(3) applications
  • apply for single or grouped changes, such as a type IB and/or type II variations (see groupings)

You should not use this scheme for:

  • urgent variations relating to the safety of your product(s)
  • standalone type IA notifications
  • changes that don’t affect product information (summary of product characteristics, leaflets, labels)
  • changes to a product with a centralised licence

You would pay for this scheme as though you were paying for individual variations. See the list of fees.

To get your CCC proposal approved and to see how to apply, follow the guidance for CCC application (PDF, 538 KB, 32 pages).

Fees

See Fees for variations.

Use the Fees Calculator to work out what the fee for your submission will be.

How to apply (all variation types except extensions)

Specific variations are given unique change codes to include in the application form.

Match the right change code to your specific variation by checking the annex in the European Commission’s guidelines. You will need to include this in your application form.

Submit the variation application form (MS Word Document, 970 KB) along with the supporting documents via the MHRA Portal.

You can now submit your application via the Central European System Platform (CESP).

Since January 2016 it has become mandatory for new marketing authorisation, renewal and variation application submissions to be made using electronic application forms (eAFs). This applies to all procedure types, including national procedures. If you are making a submission using the portal, you must submit using the portal forms as well as submitting the eAF. If you are submitting your application through CESP or MHRA Submissions you will only need to submit the eAF.

You must submit your variation using the electronic Common Technical Document (eCTD).

We check that eCTD submissions are technically valid using the Lorenz Docubridge validation tool which strictly aligns validation against ICH international standards and eCTD 3.2 regional requirements. We recommend that you use a validation tool to check your submission.

You can check the validation of your submission before making it using the LORENZ eValidator Basic validation software for eCTD and more. Your MHRA agent will use the Lorenz docuBridge eCTD tool to technically validate the submission against ICH international standards, eCTD 3.2 EU regional requirements, once we receive it.  

For more information on the standards, see: 

If you have any questions about submitting your variation, email [email protected].

For submissions via MHRA, see Register to make submissions to the MHRA.

You should use our eAF and cover letter tool to determine what information you need to include in your application. If you do not include the correct information your application will not be validated.

Submissions through the Common European Submission Portal (CESP)

This system is available from the Heads of Medicines Agencies (HMA) and provides a simple and secure mechanism for exchange of information between applicants and regulatory agencies.

The purpose of the system is to:

  • provide a secure method of communicating with regulatory agencies via one platform
  • allow submission of an application once to reach all required agencies
  • reduce the burden for both industry and regulators of submitting and handling applications on CD-ROM and DVD

If you are a first time CESP user and wish to set up an organisation or university or trust to manage multiple users on the system, register with CESP company registration.

If you are a standalone user and wish to upload for non-commercial use on your own behalf, register with CESP non-commercial user registration.

Once registered, you will receive credentials to access the portal to your registered email address.

General CESP training is available to all registered users via CESP’s training menu once logged into the system. Training-on-demand videos are available and you can also sign up to our free online weekly live demonstrations. CESP encourage all users to attend training before using the system. View FAQs.

Supporting documents

For CMS submissions send a dispatch date list (detailing when you intend to dispatch the products) to all member states before submitting your application if your MA was granted through the mutual recognition or decentralised procedures. You should emailed the list to [email protected] for type IB and II changes and include a copy in the ‘additional data’ section of the eCTD format.

Type IA and IB

For type IA and IB variation applications you need to include:

  • a cover letter with your MA number, type of variation and reason for the variation
  • an explanation of your grouped variations if applicable, making specific reference to the Heads of Medicines Agencies (HMA) acceptable groupings guidance and examples of groupings (PDF, 2.5 MB, 12 pages) or the confirmation email from MHRA agreeing you can submit grouped variations
  • the supporting information required for specific variations as set out in the annex of the European Commission’s guidelines
  • present and proposed details of your product presented as a separate document if necessary
  • a contents page listing all documents included in your submission

Type II

For type II applications, you must include all of the above and:

  • relevant information to support your application such as publications and any cited references
  • a new or updated addendum to the ‘quality overall summary’, clinical and non-clinical overviews

Summary of product characteristics (SPC)

If relevant, you should submit the summary of product characteristic fragments (SPC) to MHRA in the correct format using the templates below. If you do not use these templates your submission will be rejected.

You must not alter these templates in any way, other than inserting the relevant information. You should save them using the following naming conventions in the ‘workingdocuments’ folder of your eCTD:

m1 -3-1-01: SPC section 1 – product name (MS Word Document, 22 KB)

m1 -3-1-02: SPC section 2 – Qualitative and quantitative composition (MS Word Document, 21.5 KB)

m1 -3-1-03: SPC section 3 - pharmaceutical form (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1-3-1-4.1: SPC section 4.1 - therapeutic indications (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 -3-1-4.2: SPC section 4.2 - posology and administration (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 -3-1-4.3: SPC section 4.3 - contra-indications (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 -3-1-4.4: SPC section 4.4 - special warnings and precautions (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-4.5: SPC section 4.5 – interaction (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-4.6: SPC section 4.6 - fertility, pregnancy and lactation (MS Word Document, 23.5 KB)

m1 3-1-4.7: SPC section 4.7 - driving and use machines (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-4.8: SPC section 4.8 - undesirable effects (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-4.9: SPC section 4.9 - overdose, emergency and antidotes (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-5.1: SPC section 5.1 – pharmacodynamics (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-5.2: SPC section 5.2 – pharmacokinetics (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-5.3: SPC section 5.3 - preclinical safety (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.1: SPC section 6.1 – excipients (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.2: SPC section 6.2 – incompatibilities (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.3: SPC section 6.3 - shelf life (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.4: SPC section 6.4 - special precautions (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.5: SPC section 6.5 – container (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-6.6: SPC section 6.6 – disposal (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-07: SPC section 7 - marketing authorisation holder (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-08: SPC section 8 - marketing authorisation number (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-09: SPC section 9 - date of the first authorisation or renewal (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-10: SPC section 10 - date of revision of the text (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-11: SPC section 11 – dosimetry (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

m1 3-1-12: SPC section 12 – radiopharmaceuticals (MS Word Document, 19.5 KB)

More information

The European Commission has published guidelines for submitting variation applications including the change codes needed. You may also find the common scenarios for submitting variations (PDF, 171 KB, 7 pages) useful.

The European Commission’s regulation1234/2008 as updated by regulation 712/2012 outlines the legislation for processing variations.

Contact

Email [email protected] with any queries, or call 020 3080 7400.

Updates to this page

Published 18 December 2014
Last updated 22 April 2024 + show all updates
  1. Added details of Lorenz Docubridge validation tool.

  2. Added link to Fees Calculator.

  3. Following the end of the transition period, published new information on marketing authorisation types.

  4. Updated Group Template

  5. Inserted new text/section - Request for Information (RFI)

  6. Updated links to Variations and CCC calculators.

  7. Updated guidance for CCC application.

  8. Links have been updated.

  9. Added a calculator to work out what the fee for your CCC submission will be.

  10. New email address for Area 3 submission queries

  11. Link to variation fees calculator added to the page

  12. Updated pre-submission checklist

  13. New common errors information and pre-submission checklist

  14. First published.

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