OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to assess the benefits of a predictive low glucose suspend (PLGS) system in real-life in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes of different age and age-related clinical challenges. METHODS Real life retrospective and descriptive analysis included 44 children (26 girls) with type 1 diabetes who were introduced to PLGS system. We divided them in three age groups: I (3-6 years old, n = 12), II (7-10 y/o, n = 16), III (11-19 y/o, n = 16). All children and their caregivers received unified training in self-management during PLGS therapy. Patients' data included: age, HbA1C levels, sex. While from the CGM metric, we obtained: time of sensor use (SENSuse), time in range (TiR): in, below and over target range and average blood glycemia (AVG), insulin suspension time (INSsusp). RESULTS SENSuse was 93% in total, with 92%, 94%, and 87% in age groups I, II, III, respectively. In total the reduction of mean HbA1C from 7.61% to 6.88% (P