AI Safety in Dentistry
โ† All articles
Regulation

MHRA Class I Registration: What It Means for an AI Dental Tool

5 min read

Why some clinical software is a regulated medical device, what Class I registration involves, and how it constrains the technology you can use.

Not all clinical software is a medical device โ€” but a great deal of it is, and the line is drawn by intended purpose rather than by technical sophistication. In the UK the MHRA regulates medical devices, including software, and a tool that supports clinical record-keeping can fall within scope.

What Class I registration involves

Class I is the lowest medical-device risk class, but registration is still a meaningful commitment. It requires the manufacturer to:

  • Define the deviceโ€™s intended purpose precisely and stand behind it.
  • Maintain technical documentation and a quality-management approach proportionate to the risk.
  • Operate post-market surveillance โ€” actively monitoring real-world use for safety signals.
  • Carry vigilance obligations: report serious incidents to the regulator.

How regulation constrains technology choices

Being a registered device is not only a badge; it removes options. Some third-party AI providers explicitly prohibit, in their terms of service, the use of their models in a regulated medical-device context. A team that takes its registration seriously must read those terms and exclude any provider whose licence forbids clinical use โ€” even when the model is otherwise attractive on quality or cost. The safe choice and the convenient choice are not always the same.

Why a dentist should care

Registration signals that a tool has been built with the regulatory framework in mind rather than retrofitted around it. For a clinician, it is a shorthand for โ€œthis vendor has accepted obligations they can be held to,โ€ which is exactly what you want from anything touching the patient record.

These principles power OpenDentist, AI clinical notes built for UK dentists.

More on safety