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Fairview Pharmacy
Fairview Pharmacy
Patient medication guide

Toujeo, made simple.

Toujeo is a concentrated, long acting background insulin. The rule patients most often miss is to use the U-300 pen exactly as labeled and never withdraw it into a syringe. This guide explains safe pen technique, missed dose safety, low glucose treatment, storage, travel, sick days, and monitoring. A Mississippi pharmacist wrote it for you.

This guide is here to teach you. It is not medical advice, and it does not replace your doctor or pharmacist. Always do what your doctor tells you, and ask a pharmacist before you change how you take any medicine.

Print this guide for your fridge

Your 60 second Toujeo safety checklist

  • Check the label every time.Toujeo is U-300 insulin glargine in SoloStar and Max SoloStar pens. Read the full insulin name and concentration before every dose. The pen window shows actual units. Do not divide or convert.
  • Use it once daily, same time.Inject once a day at the same time. A dose change can take at least 5 days to show its full effect.
  • Prime with a new needle.Attach a new needle and prime with 3 units before every injection. After the counter reaches zero, keep the button pressed and count slowly to 5.
  • Know the signs of low blood sugar.Shaking, sweating, hunger, fast heartbeat, dizziness, confusion, blurred vision, or weakness. Carry fast carbohydrate and keep prescribed glucagon available.
  • Never share your pen.Do not share the pen with anyone, even if the needle is changed. Use a new needle for every injection.
  • Never guess after a missed dose.Do not double. Check your glucose and follow your written plan or call the diabetes team. The full effect changes slowly.

What Toujeo is and why your clinician prescribed it

Toujeo is the brand name for insulin glargine U-300. It is a concentrated, long acting basal insulin. Basal means background. It gives your body steady insulin all day.

It is FDA approved to improve glucose control in adults and in children 6 years and older with diabetes.

One thing to know: Toujeo is not unit for unit interchangeable in effect with Lantus, even though both contain insulin glargine. Your dose is personal. It depends on your diabetes type, glucose results, food, activity, illness, kidney and liver function, and your other medicines.

The simple version: Toujeo provides concentrated background insulin with a prolonged profile. It works quietly all day, and it asks you to be exact with the pen, the dose, and the time.

How Toujeo works

Insulin acts like a key. It helps glucose move from the blood into muscle and fat cells, and it reduces extra glucose released by the liver.

The timing of that action depends on the insulin. A basal insulin like Toujeo creates background coverage. A mealtime insulin is timed around food.

The medicine cannot tell whether you ate, exercised, vomited, or accidentally repeated a dose. That is why glucose monitoring, exact timing, site rotation, and a written low glucose plan are part of the treatment, not optional extras.

Your dose

Your dose is personal. It may change with glucose patterns, food, activity, illness, steroid use, kidney or liver function, and other diabetes medicines. Only the clinician responsible for your diabetes should change it.

Take it once daily at the same time, under the skin of the abdomen, thigh, or upper arm. Rotate sites. Use only clear, colorless solution.

The pen window shows actual units. Dial the prescribed dose, inject, and count slowly to 5 after the counter reaches zero. Never withdraw Toujeo from a pen with a syringe. Do not mix it, dilute it, use it in a pump, or inject it into a vein.

SoloStar and Max SoloStar pens have different minimum steps and maximum doses per injection. Use the exact pen prescribed for you. If you are not sure which pen you have, ask your pharmacist. That is exactly the kind of question we answer at Fairview.

Timing, and what to do if you miss a dose

Inject Toujeo once daily at the same time each day. The full glucose lowering effect of a dose change may take at least 5 days to show.

The label does not give a universal catch up dose. That is why the safest answer is the one below.

If you miss a dose:

  • Do not double. Do not take two full doses close together.
  • Check your glucose.
  • Follow your written plan, or call the diabetes team for a plan specific to this product.
  • If you have type 1 diabetes, follow your ketone instructions and get prompt guidance.

What you may notice, and what needs a call

You may notice when you begin treatment:

  • Mild redness at the injection site. Rotate sites.
  • Some weight gain or fluid retention. Insulin can cause both.
  • Glucose changes while you adjust to a new insulin or concentration. Monitor more often as directed and do not stack corrections too close together.

Call your doctor or pharmacist promptly if you notice:

  • Repeated glucose below your action threshold, or low readings you cannot explain.
  • Glucose that stays above your call threshold even when you follow the correction plan.
  • Moderate or large ketones, especially with type 1 diabetes.
  • A wrong insulin, wrong concentration, or wrong dose error, even if you feel well.
  • New injection site lumps, pits, or infection, or unpredictable glucose after changing sites.
  • Vomiting, poor intake, fever, or steroid treatment that disrupts your usual plan.
  • Rapid swelling or shortness of breath.

Get urgent help or call 911 if you have:

  • Unconsciousness, seizure, or inability to swallow during low glucose. Give prescribed glucagon, place the person on their side, and call 911.
  • Trouble breathing, face or throat swelling, or a severe allergic reaction.
  • Possible diabetic ketoacidosis: vomiting, belly pain, deep or rapid breathing, fruity breath, confusion, or high glucose with significant ketones.
  • A serious insulin overdose, or glucose falling fast that you cannot keep in range.

What to be careful with

Many medicines and life changes alter insulin needs. Review every change with Fairview and your diabetes team.

Other glucose lowering medicines can add to your low glucose risk. Beta blockers, clonidine, and some other medicines may hide warning signs such as a fast heartbeat or tremor. Steroids, some antipsychotics, decongestants, and illness can raise glucose. ACE inhibitors, salicylates, alcohol, and other medicines can sometimes increase low glucose risk. Thiazolidinediones used with insulin can worsen fluid retention or heart failure.

Alcohol may cause delayed low glucose, especially without food.

You do not need to memorize every interaction. Before starting, stopping, or changing another medicine or supplement, tell your pharmacist that you take Toujeo. Every single time.

What it costs

The cost is different for every person, because every insurance plan is different.

Here is the honest way to find your price. If you pay cash, call Fairview and we will give you a price for your situation. If you have private insurance, there may be a coupon or a savings program from the maker of the drug that helps lower your cost, and we will check if one is available for you. The best step is to let a pharmacist look at your plan. We do this for every patient.

Do not let cost make you skip doses. Call us first. There is almost always something we can do.

Availability and insurance coverage can change. Fairview will check whether an FDA approved lower cost alternative, a manufacturer savings program, an insurance exception, or another cost saving option is available for your specific prescription.

What should be checked

Your monitoring plan depends on why you take Toujeo, your dose, your other conditions, and your other medicines. Here is what your care team may follow.

Your doctor should check, now and then:

  • Your CGM or meter glucose patterns, and any low or high events.
  • Your A1C and your individual time in range goals.
  • Kidney and liver changes that may reduce your insulin needs.
  • Your weight, swelling, food intake, activity, and illness.

Your pharmacist should, now and then:

  • Confirm your exact product, concentration, device, and directions match your prescription.
  • Look at your injection sites and technique.
  • Check every new medicine against your insulin.
  • Make sure your glucagon, meter or CGM backup, and ketone supplies are on hand and not expired.

At Fairview, we can demonstrate your exact pen, review storage and travel, and help coordinate questions with your prescriber.

Special situations

If you become sick or cannot eat.

Do not stop basal insulin on your own. Check glucose more often, check ketones when directed, drink fluids, and call for vomiting or readings out of range. Mealtime decisions require your written sick day plan.

Travel.

Carry insulin and backup supplies in hand luggage. Protect them from freezing and heat. Never leave insulin in a car, which can become hot or freezing. Get a written plan for time zones before you travel.

Pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Insulin is often used during pregnancy, but needs can change quickly. Coordinate closely with your obstetric and diabetes teams.

Kidney or liver disease.

Insulin needs may fall as kidney or liver function worsens, which raises low glucose risk. Monitor more often and let the clinician adjust the plan.

Driving and machinery.

Do not drive with low glucose. Check before driving when your plan directs, and carry fast carbohydrate.

If you use a CGM.

Confirm with a meter when your symptoms do not match the sensor, or when the device tells you to check. Record your insulin time and avoid stacking corrections.

Storage.

Unopened pens: refrigerate at 36°F to 46°F, protected from light. Do not freeze. Pens you are using: keep at room temperature below 86°F, do not refrigerate, keep capped and away from direct heat and light, and discard after 56 days. Remove the needle after each injection.

How Fairview helps Toujeo patients

When you fill Toujeo at Fairview, here is what you get. This is normal care for us, not something extra.

At your first fill:

  • We confirm the medicine, strength, schedule, and treatment purpose.
  • We review your medicines for interactions.
  • We explain the key safety rule and demonstrate your exact pen.
  • We help you build a workable daily plan and identify insurance barriers.

At every refill:

  • We check for new medicines and ask about side effects.
  • We help prevent refill gaps.
  • We review lab or appointment needs and reinforce correct technique.
  • We look into cost changes.

When something changes:

  • We review any new medicine and contact your prescriber when needed.
  • We help you prepare medication information for surgery or travel.
  • We discuss side effects and counsel an approved caregiver.

Questions patients ask about Toujeo

Once daily at the same time each day.

Have a question about your Toujeo? Ask a pharmacist who knows it well.

The Toujeo safety lesson is to verify the exact insulin, use the U-300 pen exactly as labeled, and never withdraw it into a syringe. Keep a written schedule, monitor your glucose, carry fast carbohydrate, and make sure someone knows how to use glucagon. Fairview can demonstrate your exact device, review storage and travel, and help coordinate questions with your prescriber. Contact us for personalized counseling or help filling or transferring the prescription.

Medical disclaimer. This guide is here to teach you. It is not medical advice, and it does not replace your doctor or pharmacist. Always do what your doctor tells you, and ask a pharmacist before you change how you take any medicine. Information about Toujeo can change. This page was last reviewed on the date shown.

Written by Dr. Mike Acheampong, PharmD, MPH, a licensed Mississippi pharmacist.

Last reviewed: Clinically reviewed July 2026.

Sources: Reviewed against current FDA prescribing information for Toujeo and Toujeo Max (insulin glargine U-300), per the official DailyMed label.

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