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Lack of Durable Improvements in β-Cell Function Following Withdrawal of Pharmacological Interventions in Adults With Impaired Glucose Tolerance or Recently Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes.

Diabetes Care · 2019

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 267 adults with early diabetes or prediabetes, three treatments—metformin alone, insulin glargine followed by metformin, and liraglutide plus metformin—improved blood sugar control and weight during the 12-month treatment period. However, three months after stopping the treatments, none of the groups showed lasting improvements in beta-cell function, which helps regulate blood sugar.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Care, 2019
Citations66
Relative citation ratio2.71
NIH percentile82
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The Restoring Insulin Secretion (RISE) Adult Medication Study compared pharmacological approaches targeted to improve β-cell function in individuals with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or treatment-naive type 2 diabetes of <12 months duration. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 267 adults with IGT ( = 197, 74%) or recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes ( = 70, 26%) were studied. Participants were randomized to receive 12 months of metformin alone, 3 months of insulin glargine with a target fasting glucose <5 mmol/L followed by 9 months of metformin, 12 months of liraglutide combined with metformin, or 12 months of placebo. β-Cell function was assessed using hyperglycemic clamps at baseline, 12 months (on treatment), and 15 months (3 months off treatment). The primary outcome was β-cell function at 15 months compared with baseline. RESULTS: All three active treatments produced on-treatment reductions in weight and improvements in HbA compared with placebo; the greatest reductions were seen in the liraglutide plus metformin group. At 12 months, glucose-stimulated C-peptide responses improved in the three active treatment groups and were greatest in the liraglutide plus metformin group, but the arginine-stimulated incremental C-peptide response was reduced in the liraglutide plus metformin group. Despite on-treatment benefits, 3 months after treatment withdrawal there were no sustained improvements in β-cell function in any treatment group. CONCLUSIONS: In adults with IGT or recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes, interventions that improved β-cell function during active treatment failed to produce persistent benefits after treatment withdrawal. These observations suggest that continued intervention may be required to alter the progressive β-cell dysfunction in IGT or early type 2 diabetes.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31178434 ↗