To determine if there's truly a connection between receiving the COVID-19 vaccine and a corresponding positive breast cancer diagnosis, I first looked at the primary source article in the original post, BreastCancer.org's "COVID-19 Vaccines and Breast Cancer: What You Need to Know" written by journalist Jamie DePolo. After clicking on the embedded link on the author's name, I was taken to BreastCancer.org's short biography page on DePolo. Holding the titled of Senior Editor at BreastCancer.org, DePolo's credited as being a communications manager at Michigan State University (MSU) and having received recognition from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) as well as the Lansing Addy award from the American Federation. Also, just 7 years ago, in 2017, DePolo, "...was named a Logan Science Journalism Fellow and was also appointed to the Cooper University Hospital Bioethics Committee" (BreastCancer.org). Given her both extensive as well as impressive resume, I feel confident that DePolo's commentary on the COVID-19 vaccine's supposed correspondence with breast cancer would portray much more true than false information.
When reading the article, majority of its content pointed more so to the potential risks of getting the COVID-19 vaccine while actively having breast cancer, rather than implying their direct correspondence. For instance, DePolo mentioned that those who fall into the category of being "immunocompromised," such as people with asthma or patients actively seeking breast cancer treatment, should acquire medical advice from the primary care physician before deciding whether or not to be vaccinated (according to CDC guidelines). However, later in the article, DePolo explicitly states, as supported by the US National Cancer Institute and The American Cancer Society that, "[there's] no evidence linking COVID-19 vaccines to cancer [or] that suggests the vaccine can make cancer grow or come back..." (DePolo, 2024).
As stated in the primary source, and further verified by the UCLA Health article, "COVID-19 vaccine can affect mammogram result, but in most case it is not a concern" by Melissa M. Joines MD and Hannah S. Milch MD of the hospital's Diagnostic Radiology Department, the main concern in this debate surrounds the mammogram process. After receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, some female patients began reporting what they believed to be the growth of a tumor in their breast, which ultimately resulted in a false positive mammogram result for breast cancer. Through screening however, these supposed lumps were proven to be the "...swelling of the axillary lymph nodes after vaccinations..." (DePolo, 2024) and posed no threat of breast cancer to the previously diagnosed patient. According the article from UCLA Health, "[over] the past months, radiologists have become more skilled in recognizing the possibility of vaccine-induced swelling...[additionally], the doctors stress that there is no correlation between the COVID-19 vaccine and breast cancer" (UCLA Health, Joines and Milch, 2021).
Given all this, I can confidently say that the claim "Covid vaccines cause breast cancer" is entirely, and without a doubt, false.