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Author Topic: Study -- "Jab" interferes with PET scan results  (Read 197 times)

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Offline Emile

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Study -- "Jab" interferes with PET scan results
« on: May 30, 2021, 07:54:19 PM »
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  • Lymph Node Findings on PET: Cancer or CÖVÌD ναccιnє?

    — Post-jab radiotracer uptake "could prompt unnecessary biopsies and treatments"
    by Mike Bassett, Staff Writer, MedPage Today May 26, 2021


       
    Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of cancer patients after they received CÖVÌD-19 vaccinations showed abnormal radiotracer uptake in lymph nodes, researchers reported.
    The retrospective study demonstrated that about 10% of patients, who had no visible axillary nodal uptake on PET imaging performed pre-vaccination, exhibited positive axillary lymph nodes after CÖVÌD-19 vaccination, according to Jason Young, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and colleagues.
    "The decision to proceed with PET imaging after recent CÖVÌD-19 vaccination should take into account the evolving knowledge of the pitfalls that such vaccination can cause on PET, as well as patient-specific factors such as the cancer type, cancer stage, and the urgency of the clinical decisions to be made based on the PET finding," the authors wrote in the American Journal of Roentgenology.
    Observed alterations "could prompt unnecessary biopsies and treatments unless appropriately recognized by interpreting physicians," they stated.
    FDG-avid reactive lymphadenopathy has been reported in patients following their shots with the pfιzєr and mσdernα CÖVÌD-19 ναccιnєs. Young and colleagues noted that systematic analyses of CÖVÌD-19 vaccination-induced changes on PET have been limited, particularly the impact of CÖVÌD-19 vaccination performed with radiotracers other than FDG, such as choline C-11.
    Their study included 67 patients (mean age 76) who underwent PET exams from Dec. 14, 2020 to March 10, 2021, after receiving either the pfιzєr or mσdernα CÖVÌD-19 ναccιnє. These patients had also undergone pre-vaccination PET without visible axillary node uptake.
    PET was performed a median of 13 days after vaccination in 44 patients who had received one ναccιnє dose, and 10 days in 23 patients who had received two doses.
    Positive axillary lymph node uptake was seen in seven (10.4%) patients, four of whom had FDG-PET exams (out of 54 patients), and three of whom had choline C-11 exams (out of 13). Ipsilateral deltoid uptake was observed in 14.5% of patients with docuмented injection laterality, including three of the seven patients with positive axillary lymph nodes.
    All of the examinations showing positive axillary lymph nodes were performed within 24 days of vaccination.
    In a separate earlier American Journal of Roentgenology study, Lacey J. McIntosh, DO, MPH, of the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, and colleagues suggested that, based on their institution's experience with CÖVÌD-19 vaccination-related uptake on FDG PET/CT, the exam should be performed at least 2 weeks after vaccination -- ideally 4-6 weeks if the exam is not urgent -- in patients with a cancer for which interpretation could be impacted by the ναccιnє.
    "At baseline these PET scans are a comprehensive way of telling where a cancer is, and how to target and treat it," McIntosh told MedPage Today. "The entire treatment plan is often based on results of this scan."
    McIntosh said that in some cases it is relatively simple to identify CÖVÌD-19 vaccination-related uptake based on vaccination history of the patient, and the natural history of the cancer clinicians are trying to evaluate. In other cases, management could depend on whether the finding is clinically relevant or irrelevant. "If the patient has a widespread cancer and has axillary lymph node involvement, it's not going to matter whether they are involved due to the cancer or because of the vaccination," she pointed out. "It's not really going to change the patient's staging or course of treatment."
    "Situations where we can really run into trouble are the cancers such as breast, melanoma, lung, and carcinoma -- any disease that has laterality -- that involve this group of lymph nodes," McIntosh said. "If you are reading a scan for newly diagnosed right-side breast cancer, and you see all of these nodes, your first thought is this is metastatic disease. But then you see that they had a vaccination on that side a week or so ago, and you really don't know if what you are seeing is from cancer or vaccination, because they look exactly the same on imaging."
    "These findings are truly confounding and could result in a major change in staging and management," she emphasized. "At that point, you need more information and that means going down either the biopsy or follow-up imaging route."
    McIntosh said that at her institution, radiologists are partnering with their oncology colleagues in order to keep vaccination status in mind when planning and ordering imaging.
    "And we're trying to raise awareness for patients and practitioners on when they should schedule vaccinations and what side they should be ναccιnαted," she explained. "For example, if a patient has a left-side breast cancer and is ναccιnαted on the contralateral side, there not going to be any diagnostic dilemma. A lot of these cases are easily avoidable."

    • Mike Bassett is a staff writer focusing on oncology and hematology. He is based in Massachusetts.
    Disclosures
    Young disclosed no relevant relationships with industry. A co-author disclosed institutional support from Novartis and pfιzєr.
    McIntosh disclosed a relevant relationship with Bioclinica.
    Primary Source
    American Journal of Roentgenology
    Source Reference: Schroeder D, et al "Frequency and characteristics of nodal and deltoid FDG and 11C-choline uptake on PET imaging performed after CÖVÌD-19 vaccination" AJR Am J Roentgenol 2021; DOI: 10.2214/AJR.21.25928.
    Secondary Source
    American Journal of Roentgenology
    Source Reference: McIntosh L, et al "CÖVÌD-19 vaccination-related uptake on FDG PET/CT: An emerging dilemma and suggestions for management" AJR Am J Roentgenol 2021; DOI: 10.2214/AJR.21.25728.
    Patience is a conquering virtue. The learned say that, if it not desert you, It vanquishes what force can never reach; Why answer back at every angry speech? No, learn forbearance or, I'll tell you what, You will be taught it, whether you will or not.
    -Geoffrey Chaucer


    Offline Miseremini

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    Offline Incredulous

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    Re: Study -- "Jab" interferes with PET scan results
    « Reply #2 on: May 31, 2021, 08:39:11 AM »
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  • Great find Emile!
    "Some preachers will keep silence about the truth, and others will trample it underfoot and deny it. Sanctity of life will be held in derision even by those who outwardly profess it, for in those days Our Lord Jesus Christ will send them not a true Pastor but a destroyer."  St. Francis of Assisi