Topics included the use of technology to manage diabetes and the psychologic impact of hypoglycemia during fasting. English-only speakers were more likely to adhere to annual HBA1C screening guidelines. Transgender patients with diabetes have increased risk of complications but lower use of antidiabetic medications. The findings suggest that approximately one-fifth of Americans who consume diet drinks may benefit from this substitution. The mortality rate for men with multiple myeloma and renal failure was nearly twice that of women. 18F-Fluciclovine PET/CT detected disease recurrence in more than half of patients with a negative PSMA PET/CT scan. Black adults had the highest age-adjusted colorectal cancer mortality rates between 2018-2023. Asian Indian and Pakistani American patients were more likely to receive chemotherapy than non-Hispanic White patients. A study compared a novel FAP inhibitor PET tracer vs standard-of-care imaging for metastatic colorectal cancer. Case reports suggest that GLP-1 receptor agonists may impact FDG PET scan image quality. Thirty percent of myeloma lytic bone lesions are not detected via FGD PET, demonstrating the need for improved visualization. REASSURE assessed the long-term safety of radium-223, an alpha-emitting calcium mimetic that targets bone metastases. Childhood cancer survivors had a 2.6-fold higher risk of mortality after breast cancer recurrence. Patients in the Northeast showed the highest age-adjusted cardiovascular mortality rate. Black patients had the lower distant-stage 5-year overall survival compared with White and Asian patients. Cardiac fat has a stronger link to atrial fibrillation in women than men. A new study show a significant increase in cardiovascular incidence among patients with HIV, with gender disparities. Women have a higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) compared to men following heart transplantation. Maternal mortality due to heart disease has more than doubled in the last 22 years, and Black women have been most impacted. Poor cardiovascular health is linked to a higher risk of CVD, and this link is stronger in woman than men.