The Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products (Aemps) has reported a problem with a diabetes application for mobile devices that could cause some nighttime alerts to not activate correctly.

This is MiniMed Go, an application developed by Medtronic Ibérica designed to communicate and connect with compatible continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) sensors and with the InPen smart insulin pen, reports Efe.

The application integrates the information from the CGM system in real time with the insulin administration data using the pen and the Simplera sensor to facilitate treatment monitoring, explained the agency dependent on the Ministry of Health in a press release.

Based on information provided to you by Medtronic, when "Adjust Day and Night" is disabled, the "Missed Dose" and "Correct High Glucose" alerts may not activate overnight.

As a result, the patient may not receive these alerts and may miss taking rapid-acting insulin if they do not manually review the data in the app, which could delay treatment and increase the risk of hyperglycemia.

To solve this problem, it is necessary to update the MiniMed Go application to version 1.2.0 or higher, something that Medtronic is already informing users about by email.