COVID Vaccine Can Boost Cancer Survival Time, Research Says
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COVID Vaccine Could Help Fight Cancer, Study Suggests

Patients with advanced lung or skin cancer who received an mRNA COVID vaccine within 100 days of starting immunotherapy saw a notable boost in survival time.
COVID Vaccine Could Help Fight Cancer, Study Suggests
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Most people think of vaccines as a way to prevent — not treat — disease. But a new study has found that a dose of a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine significantly increased survival time for people with stage 3 or 4 cancer who received immunotherapy.

These findings are preliminary, but if they are validated in a larger, more conclusive clinical trial, the result could be “a new paradigm” for cancer care, says study coauthor Elias Sayour, MD, PhD, an associate professor of neurosurgery and the principal investigator of the RNA Engineering Laboratory at University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville.

“This is really exciting,” says Tanya Evans, MD, a dermatologist and the medical director of the skin cancer program at the melanoma clinic at MemorialCare Saddleback Medical Center in Laguna Hills, California, who was not involved in the research.

How Much Longer Did People Live?

Researchers analyzed records from more than 1,000 patients with advanced lung or skin cancer who were receiving immunotherapy at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. In basic terms, immunotherapy medications work by teaching a patient’s immune system how to recognize and attack cancer cells.

The analysis of lung cancer patients compared two groups: a group of 180 people with advanced lung cancer who received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine within 100 days of starting immunotherapy, and a group of 704 patients who received the same immunotherapy drugs but didn’t get the vaccine.

The researchers discovered that people with advanced lung cancer who received the vaccine nearly doubled their survival time, from 20.6 months (on average) to 37.3 months.

In patients with advanced melanoma, the most deadly form of skin cancer, 43 received the COVID-19 vaccine within 100 days of starting immunotherapy, while 167 did not get the vaccine. The researchers discovered that those who received the vaccine saw their survival time increase from 26.7 months to up to 40 months. Some melanoma patients were still alive when researchers collected the data, which suggests the impact of the vaccine could be even greater.

“These findings are important because they suggest that widely available mRNA vaccines designed to target COVID-19 might help patients’ immune systems kill their cancer,” says Adam Grippin, MD, PhD, the lead study author and a senior resident in radiation oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

How Do mRNA Vaccines Work?

It’s important to note that, when researchers looked back at the medical records, they observed no changes in survival times when patients received pneumonia or flu vaccines, which are not mRNA vaccines.

That suggests something special about mRNA vaccines, says Nilesh Vora, MD, a medical oncologist and the medical director of the Todd Cancer Institute at Long Beach Medical Center in Long Beach, California.

Vaccines that use mRNA (aka messenger RNA) work differently from conventional vaccines.

COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, produced by Pfizer and Moderna, work by prompting human cells to make a part of the coronavirus virus called a spike protein. Rather than causing infection, this prompts the immune system to produce protective antibodies, which recognize the coronavirus quickly and spring into action should there be an exposure.

Why Does Vaccination Help Cancer Patients Live Longer?

Scientists are still investigating why COVID-19 mRNA vaccines might help fight cancer. But there is a theory. “The mRNA vaccines increase the likelihood of conventional immunotherapy working,” Dr. Sayour says. “This is through the release of cellular alarms that mobilize immune cells to recognize the tumor as foreign.”

Dr. Vora calls this response an “enhancement” of the body’s immune system. “When you give immunotherapy for lung cancer on top of that, you get even more of a response,” he says.

Dr. Grippin describes the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine as a “siren” that activates the immune system and empowers it to kill cancer cells. “Tumor cells counter this immune attack by expressing [making] ‘immune checkpoints’ — proteins that turn off the immune system,” he says. “When we combine mRNA vaccines with immune checkpoint inhibitors, we block these proteins and unleash the power of the immune system to kill cancer.”

Dr. Evans expands on that idea. “In a sense, the vaccine expands the tumor cells and the immune therapy keeps it going for a stronger reaction,” she says. “This is great news for melanoma and lung cancer, as well as other cancers.”

Why the Findings Matter

This study was focused on patients with certain types of cancer who used the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, but oncologists say the findings have even bigger implications. “This adds fuel to the thought that the immune system plays a tremendous role in cancer outcomes,” Vora says. “It seems that an mRNA vaccine given around the same time as immunotherapy can enhance immune response.”

The results also support the development of universal cancer vaccines to “wake up” the immune system before people undergo immunotherapy, Sayour says.

Additionally, the findings suggest that future mRNA vaccines could be tailored to target specific cancers, Evans says. “Instead of presenting instructions to make a spike protein, you can make instructions to make antigens to the cancer,” she explains. (Antigens are any substance that provokes the immune system to make antibodies.) “Then, the body can make antibodies that attack the cancer directly.”

What Happens Next?

The study was observational and retrospective (scientists looked back at existing data not initially collected for this research) and will require a randomized, controlled trial to see if the findings can be replicated. But the research team is already planning a phase 3 clinical trial that is expected to start before the end of the year.

“Our hope is that RNA therapeutics could not only help patients who are already planning to receive immune therapy, but also extend the benefits of immune therapy to patients with immune-resistant tumors,” Grippin says.

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Grippin A et al. SARS-CoV-2 mRNA Vaccines Sensitize Tumours to Immune Checkpoint Blockade. Nature. October 22, 2025.

Emily Kay Votruba

Fact-Checker
Emily Kay Votruba has copy edited and fact-checked for national magazines, websites, and books since 1997, including Self, GQ, Gourmet, Golf Magazine, Outside, Cornell University Press, Penguin Random House, and Harper's Magazine. Her projects have included cookbooks (Padma Lakshmi's Tangy Tart Hot & Sweet), self-help and advice titles (Mika Brzezinski's Know Your Value: Women, Money, and Getting What You're Worth), memoirs (Larry King's My Remarkable Journey), and science (Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Learn, by Cathy Davidson). She started freelancing for Everyday Health in 2016.
Korin Miller

Korin Miller

Author

Korin Miller is a health journalist with more than a decade of experience in the field. She covers a range of health topics, including nutrition, recent research, wellness, fitness, mental health, and infectious diseases.

Miller received a double bachelor's in international relations and marketing from The College of William & Mary and master's in interactive media from American University. She has been published in The Washington Post, Prevention, Cosmopolitan, Women's Health, The Bump, and Yahoo News, among others.

When she's not working, Miller is focused on raising her four young kids.