Please Help w/Ordering Levemir

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Tanya and Ducia

Member Since 2017
Hello everyone,

I was wondering if anyone uses Levimir Penfill and can help me understanding how to use it. Or if I should buy it all.

It turns out that Mark Marine's Pharmacy no longer sells Levemir flex pens which we were using for the past couple of years. I talked to someone in their customer service and they told me that I won't be able to draw insulin from the Penfill with syringe as I used to do from the old pen(Levemir flex pen). As the most of you do I alter the doses by 0.25U (BD syringe). The Penfill dispenses doses by whole unit. Our new Vet never used Levemir before and couldn't help. He never heard of 1/4U doses.:rolleyes:

The current pen I use expired in Aug 2023. Ducia needs fresh insulin.
Are there any other places I can order Lev in Flex Pens from?

Or does anyone know how to draw a dose from the Penfill (v. Flex Pen) using BD half unit marked syringe?

Thank you for your advice.

Very best wishes to all.
 
I just got some Levemir from Marks Marine a couple months ago. The Penfill is a cartridge and insulin can be drawn from it just like with the Flexpen or a vial. However, you should also receive a pen with the box of 5 cartridges and the cartridge slips right in if you prefer it that way. Be sure to mention that you'll need a pen when you order. Several years ago a friend went to Canada and brought back Levemir cartridges (no pen) and I used them like a mini-vial.

I've use Levemir well past the expiration date and found it to be just as effective. One of the nice things about it.
 
No, the old pens were designed to be a single unit and then disposed of. I tried to get the cartridge out of an old pen just to see if I could and there was no budging it. The new pens are made of metal vs plastic and will last a very long time. I'm rather impressed that Canada is being environmentally responsible about plastic. Anyway, it's real easy to insert the cartridge - unscrew the bottom half of the pen, drop the cartridge in, screw it back together - and there was no extra charge for the pen. I said to mention that you'd need one because the cartridges are intended to be refills for the pen and I don't know if they automatically send a new pen with every order.
 
I used the Penfills - I am in Canada. Just think of them like mini vials in shape, but you still withdraw the insulin with the same process as you do the pen. Unlike a vial, you don't put air in first. The pen is just extra packaging you don't need.

The picture is a Lantus cartridge, but it works the same, only the Lev one is green:
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It appears that the FDA is prohibiting cartridges for human insulin pens. When Lantus was first introduced in the US t was available in three forms: vials, disposable pens, and pen cartridges for reusable pens. Some of the reusable pens had an LCD screen to indicate dose and total insulin used. The cartridges were a little less expensive than the disposable pens. Then shortly afterwards the cartridges were no longer available
 
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