DNA Contamination in COVID-19 Vaccines May Explain Rise in Cancers, Clots, Autoimmune Diseases: Pathologist

Clinical pathologist and immunology specialist Dr. Ryan Cole said that DNA contamination in some COVID-19 vaccines may be linked to a rise in various cancers.

According to Dr. Ryan Cole, a clinical pathologist, DNA contamination in some COVID-19 vaccines may be linked to an increase in cancers, microclotting, and autoimmune diseases.

“My main concern is that billions of people around the world have received a product that was overtly contaminated with something that should not have been in the product,” Dr. Cole, an anatomic clinical pathologist with postgraduate Ph.D. training in immunology, told the “American Thought Leaders” program recently.
“If I went and bought some meat at the grocery store and they had heavy metal or pesticide toxins, they would pull those from the shelves immediately,” he said.

Recently, researchers discovered billions of residual DNA fragments in vaccine vials containing Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccines, including molecules derived from Simian Virus 40 (SV40) used as “promoters” or “enhancers” that help produce the mRNA molecules that help human cells make proteins that trigger an immune response inside the body.

Monkey Virus ‘Enhancers’ in Vaccines

SV40 is a monkey polyomavirus associated with cancer in laboratory animals. While the virus itself was not found in Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, the presence of the SV40 enhancer gene is contentious because it comes from a virus known to cause cancer. However, some experts have expressed concern that the SV40 enhancer may be linked to adverse events.
The SV40 enhancer, according to Dr. Cole, poses health risks because it contains a “concerning” nuclear co-localization sequence that “allows it to get into the nucleus of the cell and to induce these different pathways of action and mechanisms that can, again, go haywire, mutate, and cause toxicity.”

In a recent interview, David Speicher, the lead author of the study that discovered SV40 enhancers in COVID-19 vaccines, told The Epoch Times that much more research is needed to investigate DNA contamination in COVID-19 vaccines. Unanswered questions include whether the SV40 sequence in the vaccines causes “turbo cancers,” or cancers that are particularly aggressive and fast-growing, he said.

A recent review of cancer registry records from 44 countries discovered a rapid rise in the incidence of 14 types of early-onset cancers, including colorectal, breast, esophageal, gastric, and pancreatic cancers, particularly in younger adults.

‘Turbo Cancers’ Rising?

According to Dr. Cole, “turbo cancers” is a colloquial term for a phenomenon that doctors are increasingly noticing, namely that cancer symptoms appear faster.
“Now I’m seeing the solid tissue cancers at rates I’ve never seen,” the doctor said. “Patients that were stable, or cancer-free for one, two, five, ten years and their cancer’s back—it’s back with a vengeance and it’s not responding to the traditional therapies.”

He claims there is no simple explanation for the “turbo cancer” phenomenon, but he believes it may be related to immune system suppression.
“It’s not necessarily that the gene sequence is causing cancer with the gene sequence … it can cause some of the mutations that lead to cancers—but what it’s also doing it’s suppressing the immune system,” he went on to say.

“And it is your immune system that kills cancer.” And if your immune system is dormant, your killer cells cannot function,” he added.

In a separate study, microbiologist Kevin McKernan, who worked on MIT’s Human Genome Project, discovered that the amount of DNA in COVID-19 vaccines could be 18 to 70 times higher than the limits set by a top health agency.

Mr. McKernan published a paper earlier this year finding that the amounts of DNA contamination in the vaccines exceeded the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) 330 ng/mg of DNA to RNA requirement by 18 to 70 times. It also exceeded the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) 0 ng/dose requirement, with a reading of 12 ng/dose.
At the time, he warned that the DNA plasmids could infiltrate the human genome, contradicting FDA and other regulators’ public statements that COVID-19 vaccines do not alter human DNA.

Dr. Cole explained that the smaller a DNA fragment is, the more likely it is to intercalate into one’s own DNA, though he added that more research is required.

“Do we still need to develop some testing, some probes to prove this?” Yes, we must do so,” he stated. “Several of us are meeting in small groups to discuss the long-term implications of this.” But it does explain a lot of the really strange things that are happening in the human body, like clots, auto-immune disease, cancers, and so on.”

He and others believe this is because the DNA fragments are changing the signals within cells.

“Human cells are meant to make human proteins,” he went on to say. “Human cells were not designed to produce foreign proteins.” When we program people’s cells to make things they shouldn’t, they can go haywire, mutate, become a target, and have our own immune attack… our own immune system attacking ourselves.”

‘Horrific Idea’


Dr. Cole stated that the DNA fragments in the COVID-19 vaccines have “so many tangents” of potential adverse events, while cautioning that it is unknown how long these fragments can remain in human cells.
He went on to say that his concern about the impact of DNA fragments on human health isn’t limited to COVID-19 vaccines.

“My concern is that this entire technology, a lipid nanoparticle in and of itself, is an unproven product,” he said, referring to the tiny balls of fat that contain and protect messenger RNA, or mRNA, as it’s shuffled into human cells to make proteins from destructive enzymes.

“They’re trying to create them for RSV and flu and many other pathogens,” he said, adding that the lipid nanoparticles transport “those little gene sequences any and everywhere in the body” and were designed to transport chemotherapeutic agents across the blood-brain barrier into the brain in particular.

“So to use this as a carrier platform, a lipid nanoparticle plus whatever gene—[it’s] cool conceptually,” he pointed out, but “in practicality, a horrific idea.”

But, he argued, “giving this to everyone at random and willy-nilly with no long-term safety data” is a bad idea.

Dr. Cole stated that, in addition to possible links to cancer and immune system issues, blood clotting was another possible adverse reaction to the vaccines, specifically the spike protein that they contain.

“But not just the spike protein,” he quickly clarified. “This was a message I got flying in yesterday, from a colleague: ‘Hey, we need to look at this particular sequence within the DNA contamination because it also codes for a very sticky protein,'” he says, referring to it as “another area” that requires more research and exploration.

“But the clots are an unusual type of clot,” he explained, explaining that they are an amyloid-type protein rather than a traditional amyloid.

While he cautioned that he was only “hypothesizing,” he said clinical patterns indicate that some people who received COVID-19 vaccines continue to produce “considerable” amounts of spike protein, which can “induce clotting pathways.”

He hypothesized that the human enzymes that naturally break down clots “are being blocked and inhibited because of those unusual sequences that have been injected into a lot of people” via COVID-19 vaccines.

‘Benefits of Their Use Outweigh Their Risks’: FDA

Concerns about billions of plasmid DNA fragments in Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine have been addressed by the FDA, which has stated that the benefits outweigh the risks.
“The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines authorized or approved for use in the United States are not defined as gene therapy,” the FDA told Maryanne Demasi, a former ABC journalist who now writes for Substack.
The FDA spokesperson went on to say that the agency “is confident in the quality, safety, and effectiveness of these vaccines” and that the “agency’s benefit-risk assessment and ongoing safety surveillance demonstrates that the benefits of their use outweigh the risks.”

Ms. Demasi’s interview with Phillip Buckhaults, a cancer genomics expert and professor at the University of South Carolina, provided context for the FDA’s response, which stated that “there is DNA contaminating the vaccine, but I was also able to put a stop to some of the rumors on social media about the SV40 virus being in the vaccine and that it’s going to give everybody cancer because that’s not true.”

He was referring to claims that the SV40 virus was present in COVID-19 vaccines and was causing cancer in people who had received vaccinations.

“There’s just a piece of SV40 promoter in the vaccine,” Mr. Buckhaults explained. “And that’s what people were seizing on, people were saying there’s a monkey virus, we’re all going to turn into monkeys or get cancers next week or something,” the professor went on, referring to previous claims on social media that it was the cause of cancers. “I did my due diligence to tamp down that kind of fear—which was my original purpose.”

Mr. Buckhaults stated that the size of the tiny particles found in the Pfizer vaccine is what matters.

“According to the FDA, 10 nanograms.” Now, 10 nanograms could be derived from a monstrous molecule. It could also be a slew of teeny-tiny molecules. And the risk of genome modification is not proportional to population size,” he added. “It depends on how many independent molecules you have.” In terms of the risk of insertional mutagenesis, having a whole bunch of these little pieces is actually far worse. That’s far worse than having even one large piece left over.”

However, he believes that there isn’t “anything nefarious” at work and that it was “kind of accidentally administratively dumb.”

According to the researcher, Pfizer, federal officials, and others “were scared to death” about COVID-19 in 2020 when the vaccines were being developed, and mistakes were made.

‘Genotoxicity Risk’

Dr. Robert Malone, who helped develop the mRNA technology used in the shot, was among the witnesses who testified at a recent hearing in Washington, saying that the SV40 enhancer sequence leaves residual DNA that could cause problems.
“That’s a proven genotoxicity risk,” that’s what he said.

He later added that the fragments could be causing the unusual types of cancers that have emerged since the vaccines’ introduction.

“I speculate that what we may find is that the cancer risk here may be partially attributed to these DNA contaminations; that would be consistent with the peer reviewed literature,” Dr. Malone went on to say. “And by the way, these DNA fragments may also be shown to contribute to genetic anomalies in fetus[es], which is one of the most prominent causes of premature abortion.”

Dr. Malone previously stated that the presence of the sequence indicates that the vaccine is tainted and should be recalled by the FDA.
The FDA told The Epoch Times that “no safety concerns related to the sequence of, or amount of, residual DNA have been identified” and that the shot would not be recalled.

The EMA, which regulates vaccines in European Union member states, told The Associated Press that “non-functional” SV40 DNA sequence fragments were used as “starting material” in the vaccine’s production.

The EMA went on to say that while most of these materials are broken down and removed during the manufacturing process, trace amounts may still be present at “very low levels” in the final product. The EMA, on the other hand, has insisted that they are well within established safety guidelines.

“EMA has seen no evidence of an association between mRNA vaccines and adverse events that could be linked to the presence of DNA material, nor are we aware of any scientific evidence showing that the very small amounts of residual DNA that may be present in vaccine batches could integrate into the DNA of vaccinated individuals,” the agency said in an e-mail to The Associated Press on Friday.

Pfizer did not respond to previous requests for comment on the DNA fragments found in its COVID-19 vaccine.

According to Pfizer, “there is no evidence to support claims that the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine contains plasmid DNA that could potentially impact a person’s DNA or be a theoretical cancer risk.”

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