Who is Infla-Rx, the maker of the new covid monoclonal EUA drug? Why is a chemo drug now EUA for intubated covid patients?
https://www.inflarx.de/
This is a no name company. They are small, based out of Germany with 3 locations in Jena, Munich, and Ann Arbor Michigan. Their stock is currently trading around $3-4 per share. They were founded in 2007! Who has ever heard of them before? They have no other drugs in their pipeline except for Vilobelimab. Hmmm. Smells awfully “Moderna” doesn’t it? How does a 15 year old company with 3 locations still exist after 15 years if they brought NOTHING to market prior to this sudden windfall EUA drug? Who is funding them?!
The CEO and founder, trained by a German medical school, just so happened to do a post doctoral fellowship at Ann Arbor at the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. I am guessing that is why they have an Ann Arbor location.
The Chief Scientific Officer was trained at a medical school in China. And guess what? He ALSO did a post-doc rotation at THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN in Ann Arbor.
The German government gave them millions of dollars to create this drug in 2022-2023.
Digging into their financials: this EUA drug was originally being tested for solid tumor treatment in cancer. Hence the chemo agents that have drug/drug interactions with this EUA drug.
Here is the link to the above info, feel free to go dig in and have a read. https://www.inflarx.de/docroot/ementals-secfilings/generated/0001213900-23-065270.pdf
And finally, here is their drug pipeline. Two drugs. The EUA for covid, previously for oncology and dermatology but now has critical covid EUA status. And 2 other unnamed drugs for “undisclosed inflammation”
Very little info on who is funding this company for 15 years, why they have never had a drug make it to market, and why they suddenly got EUA for a cancer drug as treatment for covid less than a month prior to the covid EUA ending in May 2023.
Something is up.
A cancer drug for solid tumors. Allegedly to reduce inflammation? Which interacts ( poorly? ) with chemo agents? Does it say which chemo agents specifically it interacts with? I guess my question is.. how will this kill people or maim them so that they become more profitable for Big Pharma?
So the FDA is now just going to bypass testing and long term studies and give new drugs EAU status? Well that’s just a minor step up from what they have been doing since Obama passed legislation that let more drugs be fast tracked on to the market without testing and long term studies. But worry not because in about a decade the FDA will find that the drugs cause harm and they will remove them from the market.
And yes this smells awfully 'ModeRNA.'