2024 MAY 08 Peer-reviewed study finds DNA CONTAMINATION in Pfizer C 19 Injectables Exceeded 500 Times Allowable Levels!!!
RED FLAG: DNA impurities in lipid nanoparticles enter the cells of a vaccinated person.
MULTIPLE RED FLAGS RAISED
by new peer-reviewed study Published: 8 May 2024
RED-FLAG 1: The available information and data indicate that the ready-to-use mRNA vaccine Comirnaty contains DNA impurities that exceed the permitted limit value by several hundred times and, in some cases, even more than 500 times.
RED-FLAG 2: Further, it should also be taken, into account that DNA impurities in Comirnaty® are apparently integrated into the lipid nanoparticles and are thus transported directly into the cells of a vaccinated person, just like the mRNA active ingredient.
RED-FLAG 3: The DNA quantification carried out as part of batch testing only at the active substance level appears to be methodologically inadequate when using qPCR.
“without prejudice”
Opinion:
MINIMUM CORRECT RESPONSIBLE RESPONSE:
These three red flags demand Pfizer C 19 Injectables, the following minimum correct responsible response anything less would be absolutely; reckless and leave Pfizer open for very, very, serious litigations:
IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL FOR USE.
Methodological Considerations Regarding the Quantification of DNA Impurities in the COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Comirnaty®
https://doi.org/10.3390/mps7030041
Submission received: 12 March 2024 / Revised: 6 May 2024 / Accepted: 7 May 2024 / Published: 8 May 2024
by Brigitte König and Jürgen O. Kirchner
2. Conclusions
The available information and data indicate that the ready-to-use mRNA vaccine Comirnaty contains DNA impurities that exceed the permitted limit value by several hundred times and, in some cases, even more than 500 times, and that this went unnoticed because the DNA quantification carried out as part of batch testing only at the active substance level appears to be methodologically inadequate when using qPCR, as explained above.
Because of the conditions during the production of the mRNA active substance of Comirnaty, the applied qPCR is designed so that a massive under-detection of DNA impurities appears to be the result.
Here, we have, to remember that qPCR is matchless if specific DNA sequences are being quantified, but this is not the case if the aim is the quantification of the total DNA content.
However, DNA contamination in Comirnaty is about total DNA, regardless of the sequences that it contains.
Accordingly, it can be assumed that a fluorescence spectrometric measurement of the total DNA in the end, product, analogous to the quantification of the mRNA active ingredient, a process that is, in fact, carried out in the end, product, is not associated with a risk of under-detecting DNA contaminations but rather provides reliable values and thus satisfies the required level of drug safety.
Against this background, experimental testing of the total DNA contained in the ready-to-use diluted vaccine Comirnaty® via fluorescence spectrometric measurement, which is to be carried out by the authorities as part of the legal mandate for official batch testing, appears to be essential.
Why this was systematically omitted by the European control laboratories according to the statements by the German Federal Government cited above should therefore be the subject of extensive expert discussions and reconsiderations.
Further, it should also be taken, into account that DNA impurities in Comirnaty® are apparently integrated into the lipid nanoparticles and are thus transported directly into the cells of a vaccinated person, just like the mRNA active ingredient.
What this means for the safety risks, particularly the possible integration of this DNA into the human genome, i.e., the risk of insertional mutagenesis, should be a secondary focus of the discussion required, which must go far beyond what could have been considered years before the so unexpected introduction of mRNA pharmaceuticals into the global market.