One of the newer phenomena the medical community has been struggling with since the rollout of the COVID vaccines is so-called “turbo cancer.” Are these fast-acting terminal cancers real, or are they a conspiracy theory? We’ve seen a lot of anecdotal evidence from oncologists who say these rapid-onset cancers are real, but not much in the way of studies—until now. Scientists in Japan have published research showing that COVID-jabbed pancreatic cancer patients are dying much faster than normal.
The peer-reviewed study was published in June in the prestigious journal Cancers. Its title is “Repeated COVID-19 Vaccination as a Poor Prognostic Factor in Pancreatic Cancer: A Retrospective, Single-Center Cohort Study.”
Doctors at the Miyagi Cancer Center in Miyagi, Japan, noticed in 2022 and 2023 that their pancreatic cancer patients were dying much sooner than normal. Pancreatic cancer has a terrible survival rate to begin with. But why were patients dying from it even faster?
In contrast to some U.S. medical institutions, doctors in Japan were quick to explore a possible link between the Covid vaccines and pancreatic cancer. Doctors in the U.S. have been extremely reluctant to perform any kind of research that may show a negative effect the Covid vaccines produce.
Pancreatic cancer is one of the bad ones. It’s the third leading cause of cancer deaths in the US. If you are diagnosed with it, you are given a timeline of how much longer you might live rather than a chance for survival. It usually doesn’t get diagnosed until after the tumor has spread beyond the pancreas and into the lymph nodes, liver, or lungs. The five-year survival rate after being diagnosed is only 1%, according to the American Cancer Society.
Most patients with this cancer in Japan die within 15 months of their first diagnosis. The doctors at Miyagi Cancer Center did a retrospective, cohort study and examined outcomes of people who had received three mRNA jabs (the first two shots in the series, plus at least one booster).
They compared the outcomes one-to-one against unvaccinated pancreatic cancer patients with similar health profiles (same age, same gender, etc.).
Most unvaccinated patients were dying within the normal timeframe of 15 months. But among the COVID-vaxed patients, they were dying an average of 10 months after diagnosis. It’s bad enough that late-stage pancreatic cancer is a death sentence, but for the COVID-jabbed, it’s an even faster death sentence.
Another way of looking at it is that unvaccinated people now live 50% longer than the COVID-vaxed when diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
Here’s a scary thought. The Japanese are better at treating pancreatic cancer than doctors here in the US.
Most American pancreatic cancer patients have a median survival time of approximately 12 months following initial diagnosis. In contrast, vaccinated patients in the Japanese study experienced a significantly shorter median survival of just 8 months. This accelerated disease progression represents a concerning deviation from typical outcomes and is what researchers and clinicians are increasingly referring to as “rapid-onset cancer.”
The researchers also examined IgG4 antibodies in the cancer patients. The body produces all sorts of antibodies to deal with different threats, including the coronavirus and cancer cells. But IgG4 antibodies are one of the least effective types that humans have.
Once a person has been vaccinated and boosted at least once, their body produces massive amounts of IgG4. A COVID vaccine gives good protection against the virus for about the first three months, when there are a lot of artificial COVID-19 antibodies produced. But then that protection rapidly dissolves as the vaccine-induced antibodies fade away. (This doesn’t happen as rapidly with the natural immunity that unvaxed people enjoy.)
In response to that, the vaccinated person’s body massively overproduces IgG4 antibodies. The Japanese doctors have proved conclusively that all the extra IgG4 antibodies lead to a poorer prognosis for pancreatic cancer patients. The more COVID shots that a person takes, the weaker the immune system becomes at fighting cancer cells. And ironically, taking more COVID boosters makes a person even more likely to keep catching COVID.
We have good reason to believe that the NIH will soon be funding more studies like this one, but here in the US. That’s good news. Well… maybe it’s not good news for the people who trusted the government and took a lot of COVID jabs.
You can read the results of the Japanese study on vaccination and pancreatic cancer HERE.

