AI Article Synopsis

  • The high immunogenicity of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines can lead to axillary lymphadenopathy, creating challenges for radiologists in distinguishing between benign and malignant lymph node swelling.
  • Understanding axillary anatomy and employing ultrasound are crucial for proper evaluation, classification, and prediction of potential metastasis in these cases.
  • Updated guidelines suggest careful consideration of vaccination history and the patient’s cancer status when managing axillary lymphadenopathy, emphasizing the importance of timely imaging and a multidisciplinary approach for complex situations.

Article Abstract

Axillary lymphadenopathy caused by the high immunogenicity of messenger RNA (mRNA) COVID-19 vaccines presents radiologists with new diagnostic dilemmas in differentiating vaccine-related benign reactive lymphadenopathy from that due to malignant causes. Understanding axillary anatomy and lymphatic drainage is key to radiologic evaluation of the axilla. US plays a critical role in evaluation and classification of axillary lymph nodes on the basis of their cortical and hilar morphology, which allows prediction of metastatic disease. Guidelines for evaluation and management of axillary lymphadenopathy continue to evolve as radiologists gain more experience with axillary lymphadenopathy related to COVID-19 vaccines. General guidelines recommend documenting vaccination dates and laterality and administering all vaccine doses contralateral to the site of primary malignancy whenever applicable. Guidelines also recommend against postponing imaging for urgent clinical indications or for treatment planning in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer. Although conservative management approaches to axillary lymphadenopathy initially recommended universal short-interval imaging follow-up, updates to those approaches as well as risk-stratified approaches recommend interpreting lymphadenopathy in the context of both vaccination timing and the patient's overall risk of metastatic disease. Patients with active breast cancer in the pretreatment or peritreatment phase should be evaluated with standard imaging protocols regardless of vaccination status. Tissue sampling and multidisciplinary discussion remain useful in management of complex cases, including increasing lymphadenopathy at follow-up imaging, MRI evaluation of extent of disease, response to neoadjuvant treatment, and potentially confounding cases. RSNA, 2022.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9447369PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/rg.220045DOI Listing

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