SciCheck Digest
The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines โ like many other vaccines โ can contain small amounts of DNA left over from the manufacturing process. Thereโs no evidence this residual DNA causes โturbo cancer,โ or very aggressive cancer. Nor did Moderna admit that โmRNA Jabs Cause Turbo-Cancer,โ contrary to an online article that misconstrues a line from a patent application.
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Vaccines can contain trace amounts of materials left over from their manufacturing process. One of these materials is DNA, which can remain in both mRNA vaccines and a variety of older vaccines. This DNA is expected and considered safe, and there are purification and quality control steps meant to ensure it is present within regulatory limits.
We have covered unsubstantiated claims that residual DNA in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines is considered โadulterationโ or integrates into peopleโs DNA and causes cancer. Representatives from regulatory agencies and various academic experts told us there isnโt reason to believe the small amounts of residual DNA in the mRNA vaccines would integrate into a personโs cellular DNA and cause cancer. And legal experts told us that the residual DNA would not be considered adulteration.
(For more about residual DNA in mRNA vaccines, read our article โCOVID-19 Vaccines Have Not Been Shown to Alter DNA, Cause Cancer.โ)
In a twist on these claims,ย recentย social mediaย postsย shared a headline falsely stating that โModerna Admits mRNA Jabs Cause Turbo-Cancerโ and referencing the residual DNA found in vaccine vials. The headline is from anย articleย published by the Peopleโs Voice, a website with a history ofย spreadingย misinformationย andย publishingย falseย headlines.
As we also have written previously, there isnโt reason to believe the mRNA vaccines cause very aggressive cancer, or โturbo cancer.โ
The new false claim, that Moderna has admitted the mRNA vaccines cause turbo cancer, stems from misleading statements made by Dr. Robert Malone, who has spread COVID-19 misinformation in the past. Malone made his remarks during a Nov. 13 event held and livestreamed by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Malone referred to a short section in a Moderna patent application, published in 2019. The patent application is related to RNA vaccines, but the comments Malone highlighted are about DNA vaccines, which remain experimental in the U.S.
In its description of DNA vaccines, the Moderna patent application mentioned some theoretical cancer-related concerns as an example of a drawback of the technology: โWith this technique, however, comes potential problems, including the possibility of insertional mutagenesis, which could lead to the activation of oncogenes or the inhibition of tumor suppressor genes.โย
Insertional mutagenesis is a phenomenon in which foreign DNA integrates into a genome, causing changes. The concern the patent application references is that the DNA could integrate in precisely the wrong place in a cellโs DNA and turn on a gene that could contribute to cancer or turn off a gene that helps protect cells from becoming cancerous.
โFDA says theyโre not aware of any concerns, but Moderna in its own patent lays out exactly the same concerns that exist about DNA and insertional mutagenesis and genotoxicity,โ Malone said.
But the concerns mentioned in the patent application were about vaccines using DNA as their main ingredient, not residual DNA left over in other types of vaccines. DNA vaccines rely on getting DNA into the nucleus of a cell, where it is transcribed into mRNA, which is used to make protein. The messenger RNA, or mRNA, vaccines work by introducing mRNA into the body of a cell, where it serves as instructions for making protein.
With residual DNA, scientists from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have written that they consider the primary cancer-related concern to be the introduction of DNA encoding an activated cancer-causing gene. There is no residual DNA encoding cancer-causing genes in the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
The patent application also makes clear that even for DNA vaccines, the concern is theoretical. What the line quoted from the patent application does not spell out is that this โpotentialโ concern has not been demonstrated to be a real safety problem, even for DNA vaccines.
In a 2020 review paper on mRNA vaccines, FDA scientists nodded to the theoretical concerns about insertional mutagenesis from DNA vaccines, while making clear they did not consider this risk to have been borne out.
In listing advantages of mRNA vaccines over DNA vaccines, they referred to the absence of the โperceivedโ risk of DNA integrating into a personโs own DNA. They went on to explain that this was a concern with DNA vaccines in the past, but experiments have shown that the rate of integration was low, โthus lessening the concern for integration.โ
In a response sent to us for our prior article on residual DNA in the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, an FDA spokesperson did in fact make reference to past concerns about DNA integration and cancer, while expressing confidence in the mRNA vaccines.
The FDA email said that โwith regard to the mRNA vaccines, while concerns have been raised previously as theoretical issues, available scientific evidence supports the conclusion that the minute amounts of residual DNA do not cause cancer or changes to a personโs genetic code.โ
Editorโs note: SciCheckโs articles providing accurate health information and correcting health misinformation are made possible by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The foundation has no control over FactCheck.orgโs editorial decisions, and the views expressed in our articles do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation.
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