Oncotarget

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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ANECDOTE

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.
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.
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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