Forgive me if this is a silly question, but is there a way to test the pathology of the tumor to determine if it was potentially caused by the vaccine? Are there certain characteristics that could be different than ordinary cancer vs. vaccine induced? A family friend of mine just had a full hysterectomy to remove a large tumor and was di…
Forgive me if this is a silly question, but is there a way to test the pathology of the tumor to determine if it was potentially caused by the vaccine? Are there certain characteristics that could be different than ordinary cancer vs. vaccine induced? A family friend of mine just had a full hysterectomy to remove a large tumor and was diagnosed with stage 3 ovarian cancer. She thinks it may have been caused by the vaccine.
(1) Request somatic HRD testing on the specimen (you can ask the lab to arrange this, but may attract a fee). If this is negative it is unlikely to be explained by the mechanism described by Jiang.
(2) Ask for spike protein immunohistochemistry in the tumour. This may be difficult because very few labs have optimised this yet
As I said, it would be unlikely that an ovarian or breast cancer has occurred this quickly as a result of this process, but if the person wanted to go through that pathway for their own peace of mind that would be the way to do it.
Forgive me if this is a silly question, but is there a way to test the pathology of the tumor to determine if it was potentially caused by the vaccine? Are there certain characteristics that could be different than ordinary cancer vs. vaccine induced? A family friend of mine just had a full hysterectomy to remove a large tumor and was diagnosed with stage 3 ovarian cancer. She thinks it may have been caused by the vaccine.
There are two things you could do.
(1) Request somatic HRD testing on the specimen (you can ask the lab to arrange this, but may attract a fee). If this is negative it is unlikely to be explained by the mechanism described by Jiang.
https://pathologytestsexplained.org.au/learning/test-index/somatic-tumour-gene-testing
(2) Ask for spike protein immunohistochemistry in the tumour. This may be difficult because very few labs have optimised this yet
As I said, it would be unlikely that an ovarian or breast cancer has occurred this quickly as a result of this process, but if the person wanted to go through that pathway for their own peace of mind that would be the way to do it.