Radiology Case Reports (Sep 2022)

COVID-19 vaccination simulating lymph node progression in a patient with prostate cancer

  • Flavio Andresciani, MD,
  • Milena Ricci, MD,
  • Rosario Francesco Grasso, MD,
  • Bruno Beomonte Zobel, MD,
  • Carlo Cosimo Quattrocchi, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 9
pp. 2996 – 2999

Abstract

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Several cases of cancer patients with 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT) evidence of metabolically active axillary lymph nodes after COVID-19 vaccination have been described, creating a diagnostic dilemma and sometimes leading to further unnecessary examinations. A 62-year-old male, diagnosed with prostate cancer, treated with hormone-therapy and radiotherapy of the prostate 2 years before, underwent fluorine-18 choline (F-FCH) PET/CT for restaging purpose, less than 3 weeks after he had received the second dose of the Pfizer BioNTech-BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. This exam showed an increased F-FCH uptake and an enlargement of the left axillary, paratracheal, para-aortic, subcarinal, and hilar bilateral lymph nodes. Fourteen weeks later, the patient underwent a new F-FCH PET-CT scan, displaying an almost complete regularization of the FCH uptake in all the previously involved regions. The patient was not treated after the first PET-CT scan, thus, the aforementioned PET/CT findings represented inflammatory vaccine-related lymph nodes. This case highlights the significance of knowing vaccination history to correctly interpret imaging findings and to avoid false-positive reports.

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