Syai · Applications

AGP report for the clinician

One chart for two weeks instead of parsing a self-monitoring diary. Standardised, readable in 90 seconds, supported by every CGM system.

AGP report for the clinician
About the condition

What it is

Ambulatory Glucose Profile (AGP) — a standardised visual report from 14 days of CGM, developed by an international group (Bergenstal 2013, Wright 2017). Includes glucose percentiles by hour, TIR/TBR/TAR, GMI, CV, and day-of-week patterns. Goal: 90 seconds for the clinician to see the main signal and decide where to adjust.

Treatment

Reading AGP in 90 seconds

1

1. TIR / TBR / TAR first

If TBR > 4%, the main action is to reduce hypo risk. Only after that consider TIR. "Hypos first."

2

2. CV — is therapy stable

CV ≤ 36% — therapy stable. > 36% — high hypo risk; instability source is in the regimen.

3

3. Hourly patterns

Night (02:00-06:00) and morning (06:00-09:00) — the main zones for basal and dawn phenomenon correction. Post-lunch peak — bolus.

4

4. Discuss with the patient

Show the AGP screen to the patient — the most effective objects-based teaching. They will find the link between behaviour and chart themselves.

Syai's role

Syai's role

All Syai data exports to the standard AGP format. Cloud access for the clinician — the patient shares a link, the doctor views it without a separate app. Visit time drops from 40 to 10 minutes on data review, freeing time for conversation and decisions.

Evidence

Studies

  1. Recommendations for standardising glucose reporting and analysis — AGP

    Bergenstal R.M. et al. · Diabetes Care · 2013

    On request
  2. Use of AGP in clinical practice — international consensus

    Wright L.A.-C., Hirsch I.B. · Endocrine Practice · 2017

    On request

Further reading

More on the manufacturer's site

Syai Health maintains a detailed topic page with clinical cases. Opens in a new tab.