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2.
medrxiv; 2021.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppzbmed-10.1101.2021.07.26.21261155

ABSTRACT

Wastewater surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 has shown to be a valuable source of information regarding SARS-CoV-2 transmission and COVID-19 cases. Though the method has been used for several decades to track other infectious diseases, there has not been a comprehensive review outlining all of the pathogens surveilled through wastewater. The aim of this study is to identify what infectious diseases have been previously studied via wastewater surveillance prior to the COVID-19 Pandemic and identify common characteristics between the studies, as well as identify current gaps in knowledge. Peer-reviewed articles published as of August 1, 2020 that examined wastewater for communicable and infectious human pathogens on 2 or more occasions were included in the study. Excluded from this list were all reviews and methods papers, single collection studies, and non-human pathogens. Infectious diseases and pathogens were identified in studies of wastewater surveillance, as well as themes of how wastewater surveillance and other measures of disease transmission were linked. This review did not include any numerical data from individual studies and thus no statistical analysis was done. 1005 articles were identified but only 100 were included in this review after applying the inclusion criteria. These studies came from 38 countries with concentration in certain countries including Italy, Israel, Brazil, Japan, and China. Twenty-five separate pathogen families were identified in the included studies, with the majority of studies examining pathogens from the family Picornaviridae, including polio and non-polio enteroviruses. Most studies of wastewater surveillance did not link what was found in the wastewater to other measures of disease transmission. Among those studies that did compare wastewater surveillance to other measures of disease transmission the value observed was dependent upon pathogen and varied by study. Wastewater surveillance has historically been used to assess water-borne and fecal-orally transmitted pathogens causing diarrheal disease. However, numerous other types of pathogens have been surveilled using wastewater and wastewater surveillance should be considered as a potential tool for many infectious diseases. Wastewater surveillance studies can be improved by incorporating other measures of disease transmission at the population-level including disease incidence and hospitalizations.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Dysentery , Communicable Diseases
3.
medrxiv; 2021.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppzbmed-10.1101.2021.06.11.21258797

ABSTRACT

Abstract: Infectious disease surveillance is vitally important to maintaining health security, but these efforts are challenged by the pace at which new pathogens emerge. Wastewater surveillance can rapidly obtain population-level estimates of disease transmission, and we leverage freedom from disease principles to make use of non-detection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater to estimate the probability that a community is free from SARS-CoV-2 transmission. From wastewater surveillance of 24 treatment plants across upstate New York beginning in May 2020, we observed a reliable limit of detection of 0.3--0.5 cases per 10,000 population. No COVID-19 cases were reported 40% of the time following a non-detection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater, and cases were less than 1 daily case per 10,000 population 97% of the time following non-detection. Trends in the intensity of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater correlate with trends in COVID-19 incidence and test positivity (>0.5), with the greatest correlation observed for active cases and a three-day lead time between wastewater sample date and clinical test date. Wastewater surveillance can cost-effectively demonstrate the geographic extent of the transmission of emerging pathogens, confirming that transmission is absent or under control and alerting of an increase in transmission. If a statewide wastewater surveillance platform had been in place prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, policymakers would have been able to complement the representative nature of wastewater samples to individual testing, likely resulting in more precise public health interventions and policies.


Subject(s)
COVID-19
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