Radiology Case Reports (Aug 2022)

Multimodal imaging findings including high-resolution 3D T2-weighted imaging for COVID-19 vaccine-associated axillary lymphadenopathy in a patient with breast cancer

  • Hiroaki Shimizu,
  • Naoko Mori, MD., PhD,
  • Hainan Ren, PhD,
  • Minoru Miyashita, MD., PhD,
  • Satoko Sato, MD., PhD,
  • Shunji Mugikura, MD., PhD,
  • Kei Takase, MD., PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 8
pp. 2831 – 2836

Abstract

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COVID-19 vaccines have received authorization worldwide. Vaccines are typically administered to the deltoid muscle, and axillary swelling/tenderness at the first dose (11.6%) and the second dose (16%) have been reported as secondary effects. Regional lymphadenopathy in the axilla and supraclavicular region has also been reported with a prevalence of 1.1% and is referred to as COVID-19 vaccine-associated lymphadenopathy (VAL). COVID-19 VAL mimics lymph node (LN) metastases on magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound, and 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-Dglucose positron emission tomography. Although several specific findings of VAL on clinical imaging have been reported, the difficulty in differentiating between VAL and LN metastases could lead to false-positive or -negative diagnoses. Here, we report a case of breast cancer with ipsilateral VAL with multimodal imaging including 3D T2-weighted imaging, a new magnetic resonance imaging technique, and discuss the future perspective for differentiating between VAL and LN metastases.

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