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Rochester biotech company testing compound to treat coronavirus

Harold Smith
Provided
Harold Smith

A Rochester company is working on finding a treatment for coronavirus.

The biotech company OyaGen has been working with a compound called OYA1 that they say could treat coronavirus in a new way.

Rather than a vaccine, the compound works by preventing the virus from making copies of itself and spreading to other cells.

The compound has only been tested in a laboratory setting, and has not been peer-reviewed.

It's possible that it could take anywhere from three months to a year to be available for clinical trials.

But Harold Smith, president and CEO of OyaGen, says the compound has been tested for safety in the 1960s, when it was being considered for use on cancer patients.

He is hoping this information will encourage the FDA to fast-track OYA1 for clinical testing in humans.

"When we are in a dire situation as we are at this time, with coronavirus, we can’t be flat-footed and look at this as we’ve got an academic leisure approach to this," Smith said.

Smith is a tenured professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of Rochester.

He previously has worked on identifying compounds to treat the Ebola virus and MERS. Those compounds never went to trial, either, but he said they were also effective in laboratory settings.

Smith said he has been working with the federal government to develop these treatments.

Veronica Volk is a senior producer and editor for WXXI News.