OBJECTIVE Pediatric type 2 diabetes prevalence is increasing, with-cell dysfunction key in its pathogenesis. The RISE Pediatric Medication Study compared two approaches-glargine followed by metformin and metformin alone-in preserving or improving beta-cell function in youth with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes during and after therapy withdrawal. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Ninety-one pubertal, overweight/obese 10-19-year-old youth with IGT (60%) or type 2 diabetes of <6 months duration (40%) were randomized to either 3 months of insulin glargine with a target glucose of 4.4-5.0 mmol/L followed by 9 months of metformin or to 12 months of metformin alone beta-Cell function (insulin sensitivity paired with-cell responses) was assessed by hyperglycemic clamp at baseline, 12 months (on treatment), and 15 months (3 months off treatment). RESULTS No significant differences were observed between treatment groups at baseline, 12 months, or 15 months in-cell function, BMI percentile, HbA(1c), fasting glucose, or oral glucose tolerance test 2-h glucose results. In both treatment groups, clamp-measured-cell function was significantly lower at 12 and 15 months versus baseline. HbA(1c) fell transiently at 6 months within both groups. BMI was higher in the glargine followed by metformin versus metformin alone group between 3 and 9 months. Only 5% of participants discontinued the interventions, and both treatments were well tolerated. CONCLUSIONS In youth with IGT or recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes, neither 3 months of glargine followed by 9 months of metformin nor 12 months of metformin alone halted the progressive deterioration of-cell function. Alternate approaches to preserve beta-cell function in youth are needed.