COVID-19 Vaccine-Related Axillary and Cervical Lymphadenopathy in Patients with Current or Prior Breast Cancer and Other Malignancies: Cross-Sectional Imaging Findings on MRI, CT, and PET-CT.
Deanna L LaneSattva S NeelapuGuofan XuOlena O WeaverPublished in: Korean journal of radiology (2021)
Breast radiologists are increasingly seeing patients with axillary adenopathy related to COVID-19 vaccination. Vaccination can cause levels I-III axillary as well as cervical lymphadenopathy. Appropriate management of vaccine-related adenopathy may vary depending on clinical context. In patients with current or past history of malignancy, vaccine-related adenopathy can be indistinguishable from nodal metastasis. This article presents imaging findings of oncology patients with adenopathy seen in the axilla or neck on cross-sectional imaging (breast MRI, CT, or PET-CT) after COVID-19 vaccination. Management approach and rationale is discussed, along with consideration on strategies to minimize false positives in vaccinated cancer patients. Time interval between vaccination and adenopathy seen on breast MRI, CT, or PET-CT is also reported.
Keyphrases
- pet ct
- contrast enhanced
- positron emission tomography
- coronavirus disease
- cross sectional
- sars cov
- lymph node
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- sentinel lymph node
- image quality
- dual energy
- magnetic resonance
- clinical trial
- machine learning
- radiation therapy
- artificial intelligence
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- young adults
- rectal cancer