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Our story

It started with one prescription nobody could check.

Meet the team

AllergenMeds founders Simon, Kai, and Alex
Simon, Kai, and Alex.
Simon, co-founder of AllergenMeds

Simon

Co-founder · Pharmacy

PharmD student at Purdue University and certified immunizer, with firsthand experience in community pharmacy and a clinical focus on excipient safety.

Kai, co-founder of AllergenMeds

Kai

Co-founder · Pharmacy

PharmD student at Purdue University and certified immunizer. His Celiac diagnosis is the personal motivation behind AllergenMaps.

Alex, co-founder of AllergenMeds

Alex

Co-founder · Lead Developer

Full-stack developer responsible for building and maintaining the AllergenMaps platform, data pipeline, and allergen mapping engine.

Who we are

We are PharmD students at Purdue University looking to make an impact on public health. We started this project in September 2025 after seeing the disconnect between excipients and the allergies they can cause, through our work in community pharmacies and through Kai’s own Celiac Disease diagnosis.

Care teams often focus on active ingredients, and patients with allergies to inactive ingredients get overlooked. Confirming whether a medication could be a trigger can mean hours on hold with manufacturers, digging through databases for information that may not exist.

We built this to streamline that process, saving time for pharmacies and giving patients confidence that their medication will not make them sick.

A personal mission

“The antibiotics I had received contained a hidden source of gluten that was missed by myself and everyone on my healthcare team. No one had even mentioned that this was a common issue. That experience led me down a rabbit hole. It was then I decided I was going to work to help the millions of people affected by this problem.”

Kai

Co-founder

Why it matters

130M+

Americans live with allergies, intolerances, or dietary restrictions.

93%

of oral medications contain at least one filler that could be an allergen.

0

food-style allergen warnings required on prescription labels.

550K+ medications, mapped.

So nobody has to guess.