Rimsys Announces Rimsys AI. Smarter, Faster, and Built for Medtech!

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Man and woman looking at a laptop screen together in an office setting.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Case Studies

A global leader in the in-vitro diagnostics market reduced time spent to create new IVDR GSPRs by 50%

April 3, 2026

Case Studies

A global medical device manufacturer reduced release authorization workload by 88%

April 3, 2026

Data Sheets

Rimsys benefits data sheet

April 3, 2026

Blogs

Rimsys Launches the Regulatory Execution Engine for MedTech

By

May 5, 2026

4 min read

Spring 2026 embeds submission authoring, AI-poweredregulatory monitoring, and configurable impact workflows inside a single RIM platform,the first step toward Rimsys’ AI vision for global regulatory operations.

 

PITTSBURGH, PA, May 5, 2026 –Regulatory Information Management (RIM) software was built to store records.That foundation has served its purpose and reached its limit. Today, Rimsys announces the Spring 2026 release: aplatform designed not to hold regulatory data, but to executeon it.

Submission volumes are growing. Markets are multiplying. Regulatory change is accelerating. Spring 2026 gives regulatory teams the tools to keep pace: embedded authoring, reusable submission content, configurable impact workflows,and AI-powered intelligence, all inside a single platform.

"Our vision for Rimsys is a platform that makes regulatory expertise go further, companies move faster, and products reach more markets than any team could accomplish alone. Spring 2026 is another meaningful step toward that vision. We are embedding the tools and intelligence that allow regulatory affairs professionals to operate at a different level, doing more strategic work, entering markets faster, and staying ahead of regulatory change rather than reacting to it. What we are building next makes this release thestarting line." – James Gianoutsos, CEO

What Spring 2026 Delivers

A brand new website that provides in-depthinformation about the Rimsys offering and the benefits to MedTech manufacturers,including details on these new products:

Intelligence: AI-Powered Regulatory Monitoring

Rimsys Intelligence provides access to regulations, guidance documents, safety alerts, and legislationacross more than 90 countries. AI triage and prioritization surface the updates most relevant to each customer’s specific products and markets, eliminatinghours of manual surveillance and putting the right information in front of theright people.

When a changerequires action, teams can move directly from regulatory signal to impact assessment without a manual handoff. Intelligence represents Rimsys’ firstproduction deployment of context-aware AI operating across a customer’s liveregulatory data, a foundation that will expand significantly in future releases.

Advanced Submissions: A Unified Submission Execution Workflow

Advanced Submissions consolidates everything required to create, manage, and publish a regulatory submission into a single workflow inside Rimsys, eliminating the disconnected tools, manual reformatting, and version fragmentation that have defined submission work for too long. Three capabilities anchor it:

Rimsys Editor

The Rimsys Editor is the cornerstone of Advanced Submissions and the most significant capability in this release. It brings word-compatible authoring and editing natively inside Rimsys, fully compatible with Microsoft Word®, allowing regulatory teams to create, co-author, review, and publish submission content without leaving the platform for the first time.

The Editor supports real-time co-authoring, tracked changes and redlining, rich content including tables and images, document comparison, and PDF publishing with standardized headers, footers, and company branding applied automatically.AI-assisted authoring is available as a configurable option, enabling teams to summarize, refine, expand, and translate content within their workflow. Rimsys AI is human-in-the-loop by design.

Universal Submissions

Universal Submissions enables teams to build from a single universal template (an IMDRF Technical Document) with content automatically mapped into market-specific templates. One master structure, many markets,without rebuilding from scratch.

Reusable Submissions

Reusable Submissions takes a completed submission from one market and uses it as the starting point for a new one. The system automatically maps content into the target market’s template, carrying applicable sections forward reducing the content creation time up to 90% and compressing the time required to enter each additional market.

Configurable Impact Surveys: Governed Change Assessment at Scale

Impact Surveys are now fully configurable. Templates can be defined for specific change event types, tied to countries orregistrations, and triggered automatically from Rimsys Intelligence findings replacing ad hoc assessments with repeatable, governed workflows. This integration creates a direct line from change event toregulatory scope, with results tracked in a single audit-ready trail.

A Platform Built for What’s Next

Spring 2026 establishes more than a set of new capabilities. It establishes the execution infrastructure, structured data model, and embedded AI foundation on which Rimsys’ longer-term vision is being built.

That vision: aworld where regulatory experts are amplified by intelligence, not constrained by information. Where the knowledge required to enter a new market, interpret a regulatory change, or scope a submission is instantly available to every member of the team. Where regulatory operations scale not by spreading experts thin, but by giving them tools that multiply their impact.

Spring is the first production step in that direction. Every submission authored inside the platform, every intelligence signal triaged by AI, and every impact assessment connected to structured regulatory data deepens the foundation. Future releases will build on it directly, expanding AI capabilities, automating more of theregulatory workflow, and ultimately enabling teamsto do work that today requires external expertise to be done inside Rimsys.

Regulatory Execution as a Business Lever

Spring 2026 is built to move metrics that matter: reduced submission cycle time variance,improved approval predictability, lower marginal effort per market, and increased team capacity without proportional headcount growth. For executive leadership, earlier approvals translate directly into faster market access and accelerated revenue recognition.

Availability

Spring 2026 isnow Generally Available. Existing customers on the Organizer product will retain access to their current experience.

To learn more about the Spring 2026 release and how Rimsys can accelerate your regulatory operations, visit rimsys.io or contact your Rimsys representative.

About Rimsys

Rimsys is the heart of regulatory operations for the medical device industry and the platformat the center of an AI-driven transformation in how regulated products reachglobal markets. A living, connected regulatory platform, Rimsys keepsregulatory intelligence, product data, approvals, and change management continuously connected, enabling organizations to expand into global markets with speed, precision, and confidence. Enterprise-ready yet intuitive to use,Rimsys is trusted by 6 of the top 12 global MedTech manufacturers to acceleratetime to market and scale regulatory operations worldwide. To learn more, visit rimsys.io.

Media Contact

letschat@rimsys.io

rimsys.io

Company
Blogs

The Real Cost of “We’ll Build It Ourselves”

By

Jeff Burk

March 18, 2026

4 min read

If you are reading this from inside a large MedTech organization, you may be thinking: we have ten times the engineering staff. Why can’t we just build this ourselves?

We-Should-Just-Build-This-Ourse…

It is a fair question.

But software has a well-known paradox. Adding more people to a complex project does not make it go faster. It usually makes it go slower. More coordination. More handoffs. More meetings about meetings. More surface area for misalignment

A large IT organization is optimized for breadth — supporting dozens of systems, managing infrastructure, keeping the lights on across the enterprise

That is valuable work.

But it is fundamentally different from building and sustaining a deep vertical product over a decade.

The people on your team have day jobs. They run devices through regulatory pathways, manage quality systems, support manufacturing, and commercialize products globally

Building a regulated platform is not a side quest.

It is a second company

What the Numbers Actually Look Like

When people compare license fees to internal builds, they stop at the wrong baseline

The real comparison is:

Licensing a specialized platform
versus
Standing up and operating a regulated software company inside your enterprise

Product management.
UX research.
Engineering.
Regulatory SMEs.
Validation and QA.
Security operations.
Compliance programs.
24/7 support.
Infrastructure.
Multi-year modernization

AI makes some of that faster.

It does not make any of it optional

With a specialized vendor, that investment is amortized across an entire customer base.

With an internal build, the full long tail of ownership falls on you

And most of that spend ends up recreating the 80 percent that has already been solved — all because someone decided the remaining 20 percent justified building from scratch

The return on that 20 percent rarely survives honest scrutiny.

The Questions That Should Keep You Honest

It is easy to get excited about how fast something can be built.

The harder exercise is asking what happens in year three, year five, year eight

When your VP of Regulatory Affairs leaves, who maintains validation documentation?

When regulations change across jurisdictions simultaneously, who redesigns workflows and pushes a validated release before the deadline?

When an auditor asks for change control history and disaster recovery test results, who is accountable?

Internal initiatives often stumble not because engineers cannot prototype, but because sustaining them for a decade is brutally hard

Sponsors move on. Budgets change. Teams reorganize.

Regulatory systems do not get to pause.

They must remain inspection-ready through acquisitions, divestitures, and leadership turnover

Systems of record are commitments, not experiments

AI Changed the Tools, Not the Gravity

I am genuinely excited about what AI enables. It will reshape regulatory operations, reduce headcount growth, compress timelines, and raise expectations for every vendor in this space

What it has not done is repeal gravity.

Most of what AI replaces today is busy work. That is enormously valuable. But busy work was never the strategic bottleneck

The hard parts remain.

  • Deciding submission strategy.
  • Interpreting regulator feedback.
  • Designing defensible workflows.
  • Staying inspection-ready.
  • Running global rollouts

Agents help teams move faster.

They do not decide what is safe, defensible, or durable

In MedTech, software is not just built.

It is designed, governed, operated, and defended

And gravity still applies.

RIM
AI
Regulatory operations
Blogs

Day Zero Is Easy. Day One Is Where It Gets Hard

By

Jeff Burk

March 18, 2026

4 min read

There is something I keep coming back to in these conversations.

You can go from idea to prototype incredibly fast right now. That is the day-zero problem, and AI has essentially solved it. You can spit out working code, scaffold an integration, and stand up a proof of concept in a week

But the nuance around an actual business workflow — the day one and beyond activities — those are dramatically harder than day zero ever was

Software engineering done well is craftsmanship.

There is more to it than generating code and turning a prototype into something a regulated enterprise can depend on. It means thinking about edge cases, failure modes, upgrade paths, observability, and long-term operability. It means deleting as much as adding. Simplifying interfaces. Collapsing concepts down to what actually matters

Inside my own teams, I see impressive first versions all the time.

That is not the hard part anymore.

The hard part is everything that comes after

We-Should-Just-Build-This-Ourse…

Faster Engineering Just Pushes Work Somewhere Else

There is a tradeoff that rarely makes it into the first ROI spreadsheet.

AI compresses build cycles. In regulated companies, that speed shows up downstream. More releases mean more validation, more SOP updates, more training, more compliance review, and more audit prep

Engineering gets cheaper.

Governance becomes the constraint

There is also a subtler version of this problem.

Agents make it easy to generate output at scale. More workflows. More automation. More code.

But in regulated environments, every new service or automation path increases surface area. More things to secure. More things to validate. More things to explain to auditors

Speed without discipline creates complexity faster.

For CTOs, that is an architectural concern.

For Regulatory leaders, that is an inspection risk.

Are You Trying to Be a Software Company?

This is the part of these conversations that most often gets skipped.

A MedTech company is not a software shop. Most are largely outsourced IT organizations, and there is nothing wrong with that. The core business is devices, science, R&D, manufacturing quality, clinical programs, and global commercialization

When internal teams talk about building major regulatory platforms, the question is not whether they can spin up a prototype.

It is whether they want to operate a full-time software company inside their enterprise

Building software at scale is a people problem. It is not a technology problem. The constraint is coordination, judgment, institutional knowledge, and sustained focus over years

The people problem does not get fixed by agents and AI.

Regulatory platforms are deeply vertical. They encode jurisdiction-specific rules, regulator expectations, submission templates, QMS integrations, inspection trails, and post-market obligations

That knowledge is earned slowly.

It lives in product decisions, data models, operating procedures, and support playbooks.

AI will reshape how these platforms evolve.

It does not remove the learning curve that created them

RIM
AI
Regulatory operations
Blogs

AI Agents and the Confidence Shift Inside MedTech IT

By

Jeff Burk

March 18, 2026

4 min read

In some MedTech IT planning meetings, a new kind of confidence has started to show up.

Not everywhere. Not in every organization. But often enough that it is worth paying attention to.

It is subtle. Casual. The kind that appears when something new begins to feel inevitable

A VP of IT or a CIO sits in a planning meeting. Someone pulls up a demo. An AI agent drafts a regulatory summary, generates a workflow, and scaffolds an integration. It looks impressive. It is impressive

Then someone says it:

Why are we paying for a platform when we could build this ourselves?

I understand the impulse.

SaaS valuations are volatile. Boards are pressing on efficiency. Hiring is under scrutiny everywhere. AI arrives, and suddenly there is a clean story. Automate friction. Avoid headcount growth. Modernize everything

Some of that is real.

I am optimistic about AI. In the right hands, it is a genuine superpower

But hope, cost pressure, aggressive marketing, and very human psychology are colliding right now. That collision is shaping how executives talk about technology strategy

In regulated industries, that matters.

The Confirmation Bias Problem

When leaders already feel pressure to reduce costs or flatten organizations, they naturally gravitate toward stories that validate those instincts. Flashy demos and headlines about agents replacing departments reinforce the belief that a breakthrough must be right around the corner

Once that belief sets in, messy operational details get discounted. Risk gets deferred.

That does not make the technology fake.

It does explain why ambition so often outruns delivery reality

For CTOs and Regulatory leaders, this is the moment to slow the conversation down.

Because prototypes are not platforms.

What AI Actually Changes

Years ago, Harvard Business Review wrote about the “hidden data factory,” the idea that organizations accumulate thousands of small one-off efforts to clean data, reconcile systems, patch workflows, and keep operations moving. No single fix ever justifies a major initiative. In aggregate, it quietly costs millions

That concept maps directly to what AI is good at today.

Inside engineering organizations, we call this work toil.

The repetitive, manual, low-judgment effort that keeps systems running but should not consume the time of highly trained people. Environment setup. Data reconciliation. Migration scripts. Test generation. Documentation drafts. Classification lookups. Compliance artifacts

AI is excellent at eliminating toil. It removes friction, collapses queues, and gives teams back time

In regulated environments, that is meaningful.

But here is the distinction that matters:

Eliminating toil does not eliminate accountability

It does not remove the need for architecture, UX design, validation strategy, regulatory interpretation, or operational ownership.

What it does is allow smaller, more senior teams to focus on the work that actually differentiates platforms.

That is very different than from saying agents replace the platforms themselves

RIM
AI
Regulatory operations
Blogs

Why MedTech Regulatory Teams Are Delegating EUDAMED to IT

By

Adam Price

February 23, 2026

4 min read

And Why That Creates Bigger Problems Over Time

As EUDAMED implementation accelerates and the UDI/Devices module becomes mandatory in May of 2026, many MedTech companies have made a seemingly practical decision. They hand EUDAMED compliance to IT.

At first glance, the logic feels sound. EUDAMED is a system. It requires integrations, data transmission, and technical connectivity. IT already owns those capabilities, so the project lands there.

But this handoff reveals a deeper misunderstanding of what EUDAMED actually represents. It is a tool that enables manufacturers to meet ongoing regulatory obligations that touch product data, submissions, post-market activities, and lifecycle management.  EUDAMED also enables manufacturers’ ACTOR partners like Notified Bodies, Authorized Representatives, Importers, and Distributors to meet their obligations under those EU regulations. Treating it as an isolated, one-time IT project creates risks to EU regulatory compliance that grow and spread across partners over time. MDR/IVDR regulatory compliance cannot be established and maintained with a one-time technical integration.

The first problem with delegating EUDAMED to IT is what it signals internally. It frames the regulation as a single event rather than a continuous program.

EUDAMED is not just about getting data into a database. It requires ongoing updates tied to regulatory changes, product modifications, vigilance activities, certificates, and market status. Every change across the product lifecycle can trigger downstream updates in EUDAMED.

When EUDAMED is positioned as a one-time event, organizations underestimate the scope, effort, and ownership required to maintain compliance over time. That gap does not show up immediately. It appears months later when updates are missed; data falls out of sync, or responsibilities become unclear.

IT teams often take on EUDAMED with the expectation that once the pipes are built, the work is largely done. In reality, the opposite happens.

As regulatory data changes, IT becomes the default escalation point for updates they do not own and cannot validate. They are asked to manage regulatory timelines, interpret data requirements, and support continuous updates that fall outside their core mandate.

This creates friction on both sides. Regulatory teams feel blocked by technical dependencies. IT teams feel burdened by compliance work they were never meant to manage. Over time, updates slow down, workarounds emerge, and risk quietly increases.

The most damaging consequence of delegating EUDAMED to IT is architectural. When EUDAMED operates outside of a centralized Regulatory Information Management system, organizations lose the opportunity to reuse data and reduce burden across the business.

Most of the data required for EUDAMED already exists within product information management and resource planning systems. Product registrations, certificates, submissions, UDI, and post-market data are not new. They are part of the regulatory lifecycle. When EUDAMED is disconnected from RIM, teams are forced to duplicate work, reconcile inconsistencies, and manually manage updates across systems.

Instead of becoming a natural extension of regulatory operations, EUDAMED turns into another silo. One that increases workload rather than streamlining it.

Establishing and maintaining regulatory information in EUDAMED is a regulatory obligation, not a technical one. While IT plays a critical role in enablement and integration, there should be a strong partnership between regulatory and IT (or a third-party submitter), but IT shouldn’t own it completely.

When EUDAMED is managed as part of a centralized RIM approach, organizations gain consistency, traceability, and reuse. Regulatory teams can leverage existing data, control updates at the source, and reduce the ripple effects of change across departments. IT supports the infrastructure, but regulatory owns the process.

This shift also changes how organizations think about compliance. Instead of reacting to EUDAMED as a standalone requirement, they treat it as part of a broader regulatory operating model that supports long-term compliance and growth.

Delegating EUDAMED to IT is rarely a conscious strategy. It is usually a symptom of fragmented regulatory operations and unclear ownership.

As MedTech companies scale globally and regulatory expectations continue to evolve, these handoffs become harder to sustain. EUDAMED exposes the cost of treating regulatory compliance as a series of isolated projects rather than an ongoing operational discipline.

The companies that navigate EUDAMED successfully are not the ones with the most complex integrations. They are the ones that anchor EUDAMED within regulatory operations, supported by centralized RIM systems that establish data consistency and reduce duplication, improve visibility, and spread the burden across the organization in a controlled way.

MedTech
RIM
EUDAMED
UDI
Blogs

Agentic AI and the Future of Regulatory Operations

By

James Gianoutsos

February 9, 2026

4 min read

Why Regulatory Operations Is Ready for Agentic AI

Regulatory operations teams are under increasing pressure. Global regulatory complexity is rising, data volumes continue to grow, and teams are expected to move faster, often without additional headcount. At the same time, employee turnover and fragmented systems make it harder to maintain continuity and institutional knowledge.

As outlined in the RIM & AI Maturity in MedTech Executive Guide, many organizations are still operating with scattered regulatory data, reactive processes, and manual workflows. These conditions increase compliance risk and slow growth.

This environment has created the conditions where a more advanced form of AI can deliver meaningful value. That is where agentic AI comes into play, not as a replacement for regulatory expertise, but as a way to strengthen how regulatory operations function day to day.

What Is Agentic AI and Why It Matters

Most AI used in regulatory environments today is assistive. It helps classify documents, extract text, or answer questions when prompted. Agentic AI goes further by operating within defined workflows and processes.

Agentic AI systems can monitor structured regulatory data continuously, identify upcoming risks or deadlines, recommend actions based on rules and historical context, and surface next steps within governed processes. Instead of responding to requests, agentic AI supports execution by working alongside regulatory teams inside their operational systems.

The distinction is important. In regulated environments, value does not come from generative output alone. It comes from intelligence that is embedded, auditable, and aligned with how regulatory work actually gets done.

Moving Regulatory Teams Off the Data Treadmill

The executive guide describes early-stage regulatory teams as being stuck on a back-office data treadmill. Highly skilled professionals spend a disproportionate amount of time searching for information, reconciling spreadsheets, and repeating manual tasks rather than applying their expertise strategically.

Agentic AI helps reduce this burden by continuously organizing and validating regulatory data, identifying missing metadata or inconsistencies early, and reducing reliance on individual memory or tribal knowledge. Over time, this improves not just efficiency, but operational resilience. Teams become less vulnerable to audits, turnover, and last-minute regulatory surprises.

Why Agentic AI Depends on Operational Maturity

One of the most important insights from the paper is that AI value scales with RIM maturity. Advanced AI capabilities are not effective without centralized regulatory information and standardized processes .

At higher maturity levels, AI can surface upcoming risks across markets and renewals, analyze submission history to recommend reusable content, and identify bottlenecks before they impact timelines. At this stage, agentic AI begins to function as an operational partner, helping teams anticipate issues rather than react to them.

This is also where many organizations encounter friction. Skipping foundational steps may create the appearance of progress, but it limits reliability and long-term impact. Agentic AI is only as effective as the data, governance, and workflows it operates within.

From Task Automation to Predictive Compliance

At the most mature stage of regulatory operations, AI becomes fully embedded in daily work. The guide describes this level as one where real-time monitoring, predictive analytics, and continuous improvement are standard practice .

In this environment, agentic AI supports predictive compliance by identifying emerging risks, highlighting resource constraints, and improving visibility across submissions and renewals. These insights allow teams to act earlier and with greater confidence.

The paper is clear on one point. AI enhances regulatory expertise, but it does not replace it. Human judgment remains essential for interpretation, decision-making, and accountability. The real value of agentic AI is that it frees regulatory professionals from low-value work so they can focus on the decisions that matter most .

Regulatory Operations as the Heart of Compliant Growth

The most significant impact of agentic AI is not automation alone. It is the elevation of regulatory operations from a reactive support function to the heart of compliant growth.

Organizations that invest in strong RIM foundations, data governance, and workflow integration are better positioned to apply AI in a way that is safe, scalable, and durable. When implemented thoughtfully, agentic AI helps regulatory operations keep pace with growth, reduce risk, and support faster, more confident decision-making across the business.

RIM
AI
Regulatory operations
I agree to the privacy policy including to Rimsys using my contact details to contact me for marketing purposes.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Hand holding smartphone showing email app with 12 unread messages notification.