A nanoviricide is not a drug, even though it's easier to just referr to it as one. It is a biomechanical nanomachine. It seeks out viruses by imitating or mimicking host cells and then ensnares them, spreading across the surface, and through surfactant mechanism tears the virus particles apart. It does not interact with host biological systems in anyway other than being metabolized. The base structure is PEG array with synthetically produced ligands attached. There should be no affect other than the extremely rare allergenic response to PEG that is observed in humans. There is no reason to expect any outcome different from those already seen in humanized mice.
Those are facts.