Background: Programmable and fixed auditory and/or vibratory threshold alerts are essential features of real-time continuous glucose monitoring (rtCGM) systems that provide users time to intervene before the onset of clinical hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia. A sixth-generation rtCGM system from Dexcom, Inc. (G6) includes a new alert that is triggered when an algorithm predicts that an estimated glucose value ≤55 mg/dL will occur within 20 min, allowing users more time to act to avoid hypoglycemia. We examined whether this predictive low glucose alert provided added benefit to traditional low threshold alerts.Methods: We analyzed glucose values from an anonymized sample of 1424 patients who transitioned to G6 from the preceding fifth-generation system (G5) with no predictive alert. Users with the low threshold alert setting of 70 or 80 mg/dL were evaluated separately. Receiver users, those who disabled the predictive low glucose alert, or those with <30 days of data immediately before or after the transition to G6 were excluded.Results: Percent time <54, ≤55, <70, and >250 mg/dL fell significantly after the transition to G6, independent of low threshold alert setting. Time in range improved for G6 users with a low threshold alert setting of 70 mg/dL.Conclusions: Advance warning provided by predictive low glucose alerts may further reduce hypoglycemia among rtCGM-experienced users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]