Swelling after COVID-19 shots can cause cancer false alarm

Anyone soon to receive a mammogram or other cancer after a COVID-19 vaccine should notify doctors to prevent false alarms due to side effects.

“We need to hear the word,” said Dr. Melissa Chen, a radiologist at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, who recently had to reassure a frightened patient who had undergone cancer research due to an enlarged lymph node.

An expert panel of three cancer centers – MD Anderson, the memorial Sloan Kettering in New York and Dana-Farber, Boston – last week published recommendations in the journal Radiology on how to deal with scans complicated by the side effect.

The main message: “It should not prevent patients from getting the vaccine,” emphasizes Chen, one of the co-authors.

The knots most affected are in the armpit and near the collarbone, on the same side as the vaccination, Chen said.

It is not clear how often this happens. The FDA found that 16% of participants in the Moderna study reported some forearm swelling after their second dose. But if the lymph nodes are only slightly enlarged, it can appear on a medical scan without people noticing any bumps.

The consumer advice is still evolving. Where experts agree: If you have been recently vaccinated, tell your radiologist before examining. This will help them determine if an enlarged lymph node is likely to be vaccine-related and can simply be monitored, or if it is of sufficient concern for a biopsy or other test.

And try to plan an upcoming screening or other cancer-related scan before vaccination if possible without losing your place in the vaccine line, the Radiology panel said.

People with active cancer on the one hand on the one hand can choose vaccination on the other hand to reduce confusion.

Do not postpone urgent exams, stresses radiologists. But there is disagreement over non-urgent scans. According to the Radiology panel, purely routine examinations should be scheduled six weeks after vaccination. In contrast, Massachusetts General Hospital recommendations address the side effect with good communication rather than with delayed screening.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Division receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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