Admelog Days Supply Calculator

This page explains how pharmacists calculate Admelog days supply using total insulin units, patient daily dose, and priming considerations. Use this insulin days supply calculator to estimate the correct insulin day supply for prescriptions including priming and expiration considerations

Quick formula

Days Supply = Usable Total Units ÷ Total Daily Dose

For Admelog, usable total units may be reduced by priming loss if that is part of your pharmacy’s calculation approach.

Why this page matters

  • Supports more consistent Admelog calculations
  • Helps explain the math clearly
  • Improves workflow for pharmacists and technicians
  • Strengthens audit-ready documentation

How to calculate Admelog days supply

Step 1: Confirm the Admelog product presentation

Before calculating days supply, verify the exact Admelog product being dispensed. Different pen presentations can contain different total unit amounts, so confirming the package is essential.

Step 2: Calculate total dispensed units

Multiply the number of pens dispensed by the number of units in each pen. This gives the starting total units available before any priming adjustment.

Step 3: Determine the patient’s total daily dose

Confirm how many units the patient injects in a full day. Admelog is commonly used with meals or correction dosing, so directions should be reviewed carefully.

Step 4: Account for priming if appropriate

If your workflow includes priming in the days supply calculation, subtract expected priming units from the total available units. This can reduce the final days supply result, especially with multiple daily injections.

See the insulin priming doses chart for quick reference.

Step 5: Divide usable units by daily dose

Once you have usable total units, divide by the daily dose to get the estimated Admelog days supply.

Step 6: Check expiration after opening

Even when the math suggests a certain number of days, practical use may also be limited by expiration after opening. Confirm this against your insulin reference page.

Review the insulin expiration chart.

Example Admelog days supply calculation

Here is a simple example using sample numbers:

  • Dispensed: 5 pens
  • Units per pen: 300 units
  • Total units dispensed: 1500 units
  • Total daily dose: 32 units/day

Basic calculation:

1500 ÷ 32 = 46.9 days supply

If priming loss is included in your process, the usable units may be lower and the calculated days supply may decrease slightly.

Common Admelog days supply mistakes

Using the wrong product presentation
Forgetting to verify total units per pen
Ignoring priming assumptions
Not confirming the exact daily dose
Missing meal-time or correction dosing
Forgetting expiration limits after opening

Related Admelog references

Frequently asked questions about Admelog days supply

How do you calculate days supply for Admelog?

Multiply the number of pens dispensed by the total units in each pen, adjust for priming loss if your workflow includes it, then divide by the patient’s total daily dose.

Does priming affect Admelog days supply?

Yes. Priming can reduce usable insulin units available for dosing, especially over repeated injections and needle changes.

Why can Admelog days supply be tricky?

Admelog calculations can be affected by product presentation, daily dose, injection frequency, priming assumptions, and expiration after opening.

Why should Admelog be reviewed separately?

Admelog has product-specific presentation and workflow considerations, so reviewing it separately helps support accurate days supply calculations.

Calculate Admelog days supply faster

Use your main insulin calculator for faster workflow, then cross-check against your priming and expiration reference pages when needed.