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From:Clerk of the Board
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Subject:Board Correspondence - FW: Watch: Censorship Delayed Publication of Peer-Reviewed Study Linking COVID
Vaccines to Blood Cancer, Authors Allege • Children"s Health Defense
Date:Monday, April 13, 2026 2:05:36 PM
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Subject: Watch: Censorship Delayed Publication of Peer-Reviewed Study Linking COVID Vaccines to
Blood Cancer, Authors Allege • Children's Health Defense
Public Record
“The story behind a case study on mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and blood
cancers may matter more than the research itself, one of the authors told John
Campbell, Ph.D., last week.
In the first of two podcast episodes, Campbell discussed the study on mRNA
vaccines and blood cancer. In a second episode, he discussed a second paper,
which chronicled the censorshipencountered by the authors of the case study.
Both papers were published Feb. 6 in the peer-reviewed journal Oncotarget.
Panagis Polykretis, Ph.D., a co-author of the case study and lead author of the
study on censorship, told Campbell that exposing “all these facts” about how
difficult it was to get the case study published might be “even more important”
than the case study itself because “it demonstrates how science has been shaped
and censored during the last years.”
Campbell agreed. He noted how little data are publicly available on COVID-19
vaccination and its long-term effects.
“It really makes you wonder just what is going on in the world of publishing
scientific information at the moment,” Campbell said. Researchers face a “great
difficulty in getting things published if they don’t fit the mainstream narrative.”
One healthy woman’s ‘very unusual’ diagnosis
The first paper examined modified messenger RNA (modRNA) vaccines and
blood-related cancers, such as leukemia and lymphoma. Many of these cancers
begin in the bone marrow, where the body produces blood cells.
The paper presented a case study on a healthy, athletic woman in her late 30s
who began experiencing “significant discomfort” the morning after her second
dose of Comirnaty, Pfizer’s mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.
“She woke up with a locked neck and jaw, tinnitus, nausea, diffuse pain, low-
grade fever, headache, and sweating,” the authors wrote. “Symptoms worsened
in the following days, accompanied by insomnia, hypersensitivity to temperature
changes, and noise.”
Her condition didn’t improve. After months of testing, doctors diagnosed her with
two serious blood cancers: acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic
lymphoma.
Campbell underscored how rare that is.
“To get one is, indeed, unfortunate,” he said. “It’s very unusual to develop both at
the same time.”
The woman went through years of intense treatment. Doctors destroyed her
bone marrow with full-body radiation, then replaced it with donor cells through a
transplant.
The paper also reviewed 30 similar cases where cancers appeared soon after
vaccination — often within days. Most involved blood-related cancers.
In several lymphoma cases, the first signs of disease appeared exactly where the
shot was given or in nearby lymph nodes.
“Coincidence? You tell me,” Campbell said. “I would have thought not.”
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/covid-vaccines-blood-cancer-peer-
reviewed-study-censorship-delayed-publication/
diana dreiss