We obviously will have to wait for more recent data to get published, although there have been a lot of claims about 'turbo-cancers' appearing after the implementation of the CoVid shots in 2020.
Notwithstanding, increasing the children's vaccine schedule from 12 shots/25 antigens in 1986 to 54 shots/70 antigens in 2019 is pretty extreme. Heck, even 12 shots sounds like a lot for a small child.
I'd like to see the cancer rates published for vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Or, 'mildly vaccinated' (e.g., just having received a few shots) vs 'fully vaccinated'. Too bad the CDC apparently doesn't have any interest in mining and publishing this data.
There are so many variables and combinations of variables that could be responsible:
Cell phones and other electronic gadgets
Cell phone towers
Vape chemicals
Genetically modified foods
Plastic particles in food packaging
High-fructose corn syrup
Fast food
Childhood Vaccinations
etc.
etc.
etc.
No, there are not turbo-cancers that suddenly appeared after people got vaccinated against Covid. Since 81% of the population has now received at least one dose of Covid vaccine, I would expect about 81% of newly diagnosed cancer patients to be vaccinated. Vaccination induces the natural response of the adaptive immune system when it encounters an antigen. Natural immune system function does not cause cancer. Cancer is caused by random mutations that accumulate with age, exposure to radiation, exposure to certain chemicals, or gene mutations that one is born with.
Any comparison of cancer rates between the unvaccinated and vaccinated will show higher rates among the vaccinated. That's because vaccination causes people to live longer lives, and the longer one lives, the more likely they are to get cancer.