How sewer science could ease testing pressure and track COVID-19
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[May 15, 2020]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - The science of sewage
surveillance could be deployed in countries across the world to help
monitor the spread of national epidemics of COVID-19 while reducing the
need for mass testing, scientists say.
Experts in the field - known as wastewater epidemiology - say that as
countries begin to ease pandemic lockdown restrictions, searching sewage
for signs of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus could help them monitor and
respond to flare-ups.
Small early studies conducted by scientific teams in The Netherlands,
France, Australia and elsewhere have found signs that the
COVID-19-causing virus can be detected in sewage.
"Most people know that you emit lots of this virus through respiratory
particles in droplets from the lungs, but what's less well known is that
you actually emit more small virus particles in faeces," said Davey
Jones, a professor of environmental science at Britain's Bangor
University.
This suggests that on a wider scale, sewage sampling would be able to
estimate the approximate number of people infected in a geographic area
without having to test every person.
"Every time a person becomes infected with COVID-19, they start shedding
virus into the sewer system," Jones said. "We're using that (knowledge)
and tracking people's toilet movements."
The practice has been used to monitor health threats and viral diseases
before.
It's a crucial tool in the global fight to eradicate polio, and
scientists in Britain and elsewhere also use it to monitor antibiotic
resistance genes from livestock farming.
"Wastewater epidemiology has been part of monitoring of polio infection
across the world, so it's not completely new," said Alex Corbishley, a
veterinary scientist at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh who is running
a three-month pilot project to track SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater in
Scotland. "But it's never really been applied to an outbreak in this
way."
"The idea here is that you could potentially use this as a relatively
cheap, but much more importantly, scaleable, way of saying 'there's X
amount of transmission' in a community."
NOT INFECTIOUS
Scientists conducting initial COVID-19 sewage studies in Europe and
Australia stress that what they are picking up is not live, infectious
virus, but dead particles or fragments of the virus's genetic material
that are not infectious.
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A scientist works in the lab at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh,
Scotland, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
May 13, 2020. Picture taken May 13, 2020. REUTERS/Russell Cheyne
In a pilot trial in Queensland, Australia, scientists were able to
detect a gene fragment of SARS-CoV-2 in sewage from two wastewater
treatment plants.
In the Netherlands, sewage epidemiologists acted ahead of the
COVID-19 outbreak there and took samples from seven cities and a
major airport in February and March.
While they found no detectable virus three weeks before the first
COVID-19 case was detected, by March 5 - barely a week after the
first case was confirmed there - they were able to detect virus
fragments.
"The detection of the virus in sewage, even when the COVID-19
prevalence is low, indicates that sewage surveillance could be a
sensitive tool to monitor the circulation of the virus," the
researchers wrote in a paper posted online on MedRxiv.
Researchers in Paris posted findings in April that showed how
sampling wastewater in the city for a month tracked the same curve
of the rising and falling epidemic there.
Few countries have the resources or capacity to test each person
individually, with most only able to test healthcare workers or
people with symptoms severe enough to mean they need hospitalisation.
This means authorities have only limited information about how
widespread the new coronavirus is or whether it is affecting some
communities more than others.
"You can use this type of surveillance as a public health tool,"
said Andrew Singer, a researcher at the UK Centre for Ecology and
Hydrology who is working with Davey and others on pilot coronavirus
sewage testing plans in Britain.
"And the utility of this approach is that it's so cheap and the
investment that you make ... will reap rewards, not just for (this)
coronavirus pandemic," but for future outbreaks too.
(Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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