Exclusive-U.S. considers airline wastewater testing as COVID surges in
China
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[December 30, 2022]
By Julie Steenhuysen and Nancy Lapid
CHICAGO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - As COVID-19 infections surge in China, the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering sampling
wastewater taken from international aircraft to track any emerging new
variants, the agency told Reuters.
Such a policy would offer a better solution to tracking the virus and
slowing its entry into the United States than new travel restrictions
announced this week by the U.S. and other countries, which require
mandatory negative COVID tests for travelers from China, three
infectious disease experts told Reuters.
Travel restrictions, such as mandatory testing, have so far failed to
significantly curb the spread of COVID and function largely as optics,
said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert at the
University of Minnesota.
"They seem to be essential from a political standpoint. I think each
government feels like they will be accused of not doing enough to
protect their citizens if they don't do these," he said.
The United States this week also expanded its voluntary genomic
sequencing program at airports, adding Seattle and Los Angeles to the
program. That brings the total number of airports gathering information
from positive tests to seven.
But experts said that may not provide a meaningful sample size.
A better solution would be testing wastewater from airlines, which would
offer a clearer picture of how the virus is mutating, given China's lack
of data transparency, said Dr Eric Topol, a genomics expert and director
of the Scripps Research Translational Institute in La Jolla, California.
Getting wastewater off planes from China "would be a very good tactic,"
Topol said, adding that it's important that the United States upgrade
its surveillance tactics "because of China being so unwilling to share
its genomic data."
China has said criticism of its COVID statistics is groundless, and
downplayed the risk of new variants, saying it expects mutations to be
more infectious but less severe. Still, doubts over official Chinese
data have prompted many places, including the United States, Italy and
Japan, to impose new testing rules on Chinese visitors as Beijing lifted
travel controls.
Airplane wastewater analysis is among several options the CDC is
considering to help slow the introduction of new variants into the
United States from other countries, CDC spokeswoman Kristen Nordlund
said in an email.
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Travellers walk with their luggage at
Beijing Capital International Airport, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing, China December 27, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang/File Photo
The agency is grappling with a lack of transparency about COVID in
China after the country of 1.4 billion people abruptly lifted strict
COVID lockdowns and testing policies, unleashing the virus into an
undervaccinated and previously unexposed population.
"Previous COVID-19 wastewater surveillance has shown to be a
valuable tool and airplane wastewater surveillance could potentially
be an option," she wrote.
French researchers reported in July that airplane wastewater tests
showed requiring negative COVID tests before international flights
does not protect countries from the spread of new variants. They
found the Omicron variant in wastewater from two commercial
airplanes that flew from Ethiopia to France in December 2021 even
though passengers had been required to take COVID tests before
boarding.
California researchers reported in July that sampling of community
wastewater in San Diego detected the presence of the Alpha, Delta,
Epsilon and Omicron variants up to 14 days before they started
showing up on nasal swabs.
Osterholm and others said mandatory testing before travel to the
United States is unlikely to keep new variants out of the country.
"Border closures or border testing really makes very little
difference. Maybe it slows it down by a few days," he said, because
the virus is likely to spread worldwide, and could infect people in
Europe or elsewhere who may then bring it to the United States.
David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health, said increasing genomic
surveillance is important, and wastewater sampling could be helpful,
but the testing takes time.
"I think we should be cautious in how much we expect those data will
be able to truly inform our ability to respond," he said.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen and Nancy Lapid; additional
reporting by Jeff Mason, Trevor Hunnicutt and Alexandra Alper in
Washington. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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