Cleary, if a prime number appears once, it can appear never again, since $a_k\nmid 1+a_1\cdot\ldots\cdot a_k\cdot\ldots$.
Claim: 5 never appears in that sequence.
Proof. Ftsoc, say $a_k=5$ for some $k$. Then $p\nmid S=1+a_1\cdot a_2\cdot\ldots\cdot a_{k-1}$ for any prime $p>5$ and also $2,3\nmid S$, as they are the 2nd and 3rd term of the sequence. Hence we must have $S=5^n$ for some $n\ge 1$ and thus $5^n-1=a_1\cdot a_2\cdot a_{k-1}$. But this is a contradiction, as the left side is divisible by $4$, while the right isn't. \square
Similarly, if $a_k=11$ is part of that sequence, then $11^n-1=a_1\cdot\ldots\cdot a_k$. Now the left side is divisble by 10, but the right isn't, as $5$ is not part of the sequence.