Case Report Explores Potential Link Between mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines and Cancer
Feb 11, 2026
A detailed case recounts rapid onset of aggressive blood cancer in a healthy woman soon after a second mRNA COVID-19 vaccine dose. The discussion highlights similar rare reports of leukemias and lymphomas appearing after vaccination. Possible immune-related mechanisms and concerns about lipid nanoparticle distribution are explored. The need for further long-term safety research is emphasized.
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Patient Case Of Leukemia After Second mRNA Dose
A healthy 38-year-old athletic woman developed acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic lymphoma months after her second Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA dose.
She first had immune-related symptoms the day after vaccination, reached remission with chemotherapy, then relapsed in the CNS and required a stem cell transplant.
insights INSIGHT
Pattern Of Hematopoietic Cases Reported After Vaccination
The authors reviewed other reports linking lymphomas and leukemias to COVID-19 vaccination and found many cases where symptoms appeared shortly after vaccination.
They propose mechanisms like immune suppression, inflammation, and interference with tumor-suppressor proteins such as p53 as possible contributors.
insights INSIGHT
Lipid Nanoparticles Could Reach Bone Marrow
Lipid nanoparticles used to deliver mRNA vaccines may circulate beyond the injection site and reach organs like bone marrow, potentially affecting hematopoietic cells.
The report highlights that altered immune signaling or genetic material in these niches could create cancer‑favored conditions in susceptible people.
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BUFFALO, NY – February 11, 2026 – A new #casereport was published in Volume 17 of Oncotarget on February 6, 2026, titled “Exploring the potential link between mRNA COVID-19 vaccinations and cancer: A case report with a review of haematopoietic malignancies with insights into pathogenic mechanisms.”
In this report, led by first author Patrizia Gentilini along with corresponding author Panagis Polykretis from the “Allineare Sanità e Salute” Foundation and Independent Medical Scientific Commission (CMSi), Milano, an international team of researchers presented a detailed case involving a healthy, athletic woman who developed acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic lymphoma shortly after receiving her second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 mRNA vaccine. The authors reviewed existing literature and discussed possible immune-related mechanisms that could connect mRNA vaccines to blood cancers, calling attention to the need for further investigation.
The case report focuses on a 38-year-old woman who began experiencing immune-related symptoms the day after her second COVID-19 mRNA vaccine dose. Within months, she was diagnosed with an aggressive blood cancer affecting early-stage lymphocytes. While she initially achieved complete remission through chemotherapy, she later experienced a central nervous system relapse and underwent a stem cell transplant. The sequence of events raises questions about whether the vaccine-induced immune response may have contributed to disease onset or progression.
To provide broader context, the authors reviewed several other reports describing similar cancer cases after COVID-19 vaccination. These included lymphomas, leukemias, and other haematopoietic disorders. In many cases, symptoms appeared shortly after vaccination. While these instances remain rare, the authors argue that the patterns merit closer study. They also discuss potential mechanisms, including immune suppression, increased inflammation, and vaccine-related interference with key cancer-protective proteins such as p53.
One concern highlighted in the report involves lipid nanoparticles used to deliver the vaccine, which may circulate beyond the injection site and reach organs such as the bone marrow. The authors note that changes in immune signaling, antibody responses, and genetic material could, under certain conditions, create conditions favorable to cancer development in susceptible individuals. However, they emphasize that a definitive cause-and-effect relationship has not been established.
“The carcinogenic risk associated with these technologies, which has long been known within the gene therapy field, represents an area of research that cannot be ignored, given the fundamental principle of medicine “primum non nocere” (first, do no harm).”
Although the case does not prove that vaccination caused the cancer, it adds to a small body of evidence suggesting that immune disturbances from mRNA vaccines should be studied further. The authors emphasize the importance of continuing long-term safety monitoring as mRNA vaccine technologies are expanded to other uses. Understanding potential rare risks is essential for ensuring informed public health decisions while maintaining trust in vaccine programs.
DOI - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28827
Correspondence to - Panagis Polykretis - panagis.polykretis@gmail.com
Abstract video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OO-wewH7mEY
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