Leukemia deaths surged 6 percent in Japan in 2022, ending a long downward trend and reaching their highest level in over a decade, Japanese researchers reported.
Breast cancers also rose sharply in 2022, the researchers found. Overall deaths from all cancers were flat in 2021 and 2022, a change after years of falling age-adjusted death rates.
Japan has one of the world’s highest mRNA vaccination rates. Nearly everyone over 70 received the first two shots, mostly Pfizer. Almost 95 percent got at least one booster.
Some mRNA skeptics argue the shots are causing sharp increases in cancer deaths and what they call “turbo cancers” – very aggressive tumors. Those claims usually come from anecdotes or estimates of cancer incidence, rather than actual cases.
This paper is among the first to offer a signal based on national-level data showing a real rise in deaths from some cancers, though it doesn’t prove the jabs caused them.
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(Chasing the truth, wherever it goes, for 20 cents a day.)
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Deaths from some common cancers, including lung and stomach, continued their long-term downward trend, the researchers reported.
But leukemias – which are relatively uncommon, killing about one-eighth as many Japanese as lung cancers – popped higher in 2022, ending a long and slow decline.
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Meanwhile, breast cancer deaths also rose in 2022, a jump came after a two-year-pause in deaths in 2021 and 2020 and returned to a longer rising trend.
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Neither these increases nor the case reports do not prove that the mRNAs cause leukemia, breast cancer, or any malignancy.
Beyond the potential for mRNAs to overstimulate the immune system and lead to B-cell proliferation and leukemias in some patients, the authors suggested one possible link to breast cancers. They speculated that vaccine-derived spike proteins might stimulate estrogen receptors on breast cancer tumors and cause them to grow more aggressively.
But this theory remains unproven. The Japanese researchers concluded their paper with a call for “further studies” to examine the possibility and mechanisms of a link.
Given the reluctance of public health authorities to look at any potential problems the mRNAs might cause, do not hold your breath.