The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Halifax company receives grant for COVID-19 test

- PETER MOREIRA pmoreira@herald.ca @entrevesto­r Peter Moreira is a principal of www.entrevesto­r.com, a news and data site for Atlantic Canadian startups.

Sona Nanotech of Halifax has secured a $4.1-million grant from Ngen, Canada's advanced manufactur­ing superclust­er, to commercial­ize its COVID-19 rapid-response antigen test.

With a mission of producing gold nanopartic­les for diagnostic testing, Sona Nano's prospects have improved in the past eight weeks as it began work on a quick and easy test for the virus that has killed thousands and paralyzed the economy.

Sona announced developmen­t of the test in February, then unveiled a range of partners, including GE Healthcare Life Sciences, to help bring it to market.

"Ngen is excited to support Sona Nanotech's efforts to get a point-of-care test for COVID-19 in the hands of Canadian medical authoritie­s as soon as possible,” said Ngen CEO Jay Myers in a statement.

“Sona's proprietar­y and unique gold nanorod technology enables a rapid-response antigen test that has the potential to significan­tly reduce the time-to-results for COVID-19 diagnosis and ultimately save lives."

The big question is when the product will be available, and Sona Nano is only saying that it is working on developmen­t and hopes to deliver the tests as soon as possible.

“Sona anticipate delivering our direct antigen detection test to market rapidly, and at scale, to help combat the continuing pandemic of COVID19,” said CEO Darren Rowles in an email Monday.

Ngen, which stands for Next Generation Manufactur­ing Canada, is one of five superclust­ers funded by the Canadian government to develop internatio­nal centres of excellence. Based in Toronto, it manages $230 million in federal funding and provided money to Sona as part of a $50-million initiative to support companies that are producing technologi­es to fight COVID-19.

Sona has developed two methods for the manufactur­e of rod-shaped gold nanopartic­les for use in diagnostic testing. The company, which grew out of nanotechno­logy research conducted at St. Francis Xavier University, intends to use its technology in a disposable lateral flow test like pregnancy tests that can be administer­ed without skilled technician­s or additional laboratory equipment.

As of February, most COVID-19 virus testing used molecular-based technology that typically cost more than $200 per test, took two to four hours to produce results and required specialize­d laboratory equipment and skilled technician­s.

Lateral flow testing provides results in between five and 15 minutes and can be administer­ed by a layperson, said the company. The new test is expected to cost less than $50. The goal is to ease the strain on the healthcare system and increase the system's capacity. There is currently no lateral flow test specific to COVID-19, the company said in February.

“This funding will speed up the whole process and continue to allow us to execute on manufactur­e contracts, secure key raw materials, provide highly skilled jobs in key roles across both technical and commercial teams,” said Rowles.

The Ngen aid would also help to “extend our consortium with new partners to assist us in bringing the first test of its kind for COVID-19 to market, at the scale that is needed to help flatten the curve.”

The company is working with a consortium of internatio­nal and Canadian partners to develop the test, including GE Healthcare Life Sciences, the Native Antigen Company of Great Britain, Charlottet­own-based Affinityim­muno, Bond Digital Health of Britain and scientific advisers Fiona Marshall and Sandy Morrison.

Sona said it doesn't expect to begin manufactur­ing its test until it secures firm orders with deposits.

Sona shares, which are listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange, were trading Wednesday afternoon up 3.7 per cent on the day at $1.12, and have increased 286 per cent in the past year.

Entrevesto­r.com produces daily news reports on the Atlantic Canadian startup community. It is financed through the sale of advertisin­g and analytic reports to clients in the private and public sectors. This support is specified whenever the name of a client appears.

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 ??  ?? Darren Rowles is president and CEO of Sona Nanotech Inc.
Darren Rowles is president and CEO of Sona Nanotech Inc.
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