| Literature DB >> 34927170 |
Nour Sharara1, Noriko Endo1, Claire Duvallet1, Newsha Ghaeli1, Mariana Matus1, Jennings Heussner1, Scott W Olesen1, Eric J Alm2,3,4,5,6, Peter R Chai7,8,9,10, Timothy B Erickson7,11.
Abstract
Accurate estimates of COVID-19 burden of infections in communities can inform public health strategy for the current pandemic. Wastewater based epidemiology (WBE) leverages sewer infrastructure to provide insights on rates of infection by measuring viral concentrations in wastewater. By accessing the sewer network at various junctures, important insights regarding COVID-19 disease activity can be gained. The analysis of sewage at the wastewater treatment plant level enables population-level surveillance of disease trends and virus mutations. At the neighborhood level, WBE can be used to describe trends in infection rates in the community thereby facilitating local efforts at targeted disease mitigation. Finally, at the building level, WBE can suggest the presence of infections and prompt individual testing. In this critical review, we describe the types of data that can be obtained through varying levels of WBE analysis, concrete plans for implementation, and public health actions that can be taken based on WBE surveillance data of infectious diseases, using recent and successful applications of WBE during the COVID-19 pandemic for illustration.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34927170 PMCID: PMC8682811 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLOS Glob Public Health ISSN: 2767-3375
Fig 1.Implementation of WBE at three geographic scales: (A) wastewater treatment plant level, (B) neighborhood level, and (C) building level.
With permission from Biobot Analytics.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000061.g001
Fig 2.Examples of wastewater surveillance data visualization.
(A) Wastewater treatment plant level: Wastewater Surveillance dashboard by the Loxahatchee River District, FL. Wastewater viral concentrations (blue dots) are compared against clinical case data (green bar). Screenshot taken by the authors on June 12, 2021, from https://loxahatcheeriver.org/wastewater-surveillance/. (B) Neighborhood level: Weekly Municipal Wastewater Sampling Data by Cambridge COVID-19 Data Center, Cambridge, MA. Samples are collected from four manholes within the City of Cambridge, which together cover the whole city. Wastewater viral concentrations at the four upstream catchments (orange, red, purple. green) are compared against each other and against a downstream catchment (gray) that covers Greater Boston. Screenshot taken by the authors on May 5, 2021, from https://cityofcambridge.shinyapps.io/COVID19/?tab=wastewater. (C) Building level: New Mexico Wastewater Surveillance System Data Dashboard, New Mexico Environment Department, NM. The line graphs represent the amount of the virus measured in wastewater samples collected at the correctional facility through time (blue). The current level of concern (bottom left) is based on the most recent sample while the current trend (bottom right) is based on the three most recently collected samples at each facility. Increasing and decreasing trends are flagged when there is an order of magnitude (or 10-fold) change in measurements. Screenshot taken by the authors on July 27, 2021 https://www.env.nm.gov/wastewater-surveillance-system-data-dashboard/.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000061.g002
Overview of wastewater geographic scales of sampling, utility of results, public health implications and limitations.
| Sampling level | Utility of results | Public Health decisions | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wastewater treatment plant (Downstream) | Trend analysis | Implementation of population level interventions (e.g., stay at home orders) and impact evaluation | Sampling at large scale does not provide insight into intra-city variability; does not offer insight into sociodemographic factors that may drive heterogeneous infection rates. |
| Independent estimate of population-level disease activity | |||
| Indicator of disease re-emergence | Downstream dilution effects | ||
| Neighborhood | Trend analysis | Strategic deployment of mobile testing units, targeted social distancing messaging, vaccination sites | Sewage collection area is defined by sewer network and may not exclusively cover the area of interest. |
| (Upstream) | Relative burden of disease activity of a neighborhood within a larger community | ||
| Indicator of disease re-emergence | Community-level COVID-19 restrictions | Labour costs, logistics associated with collecting samples from city manholes. | |
| Data needs to be interpreted considering influx to, and out of, the catchment area | |||
| Building (Upstream) | Qualitative presence or absence of disease on site Outbreak indicator | Quarantine of building occupants Mass testing of building occupants | Result only provides a readout of the infection status of individuals who have used the building restroom facilities |
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000061.t001