Université Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, Laboratoire Microorganismes: Génome et Environnement, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
CHU Clermont-Ferrand, Centre National de Référence Entérovirus et parechovirus - Laboratoire Associé, Laboratoire de Virologie, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Euro Surveill. 2018 Feb;23(7). doi: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2018.23.7.17-00237.
BackgroundHuman enteric viruses are resistant in the environment and transmitted via the faecal-oral route. Viral shedding in wastewater gives the opportunity to track emerging pathogens and study the epidemiology of enteric infectious diseases in the community. The aim of this study was to monitor the circulation of enteric viruses in the population of the Clermont-Ferrand area (France) by analysis of urban wastewaters. Raw and treated wastewaters were collected between October 2014 and October 2015 and concentrated by a two-step protocol using tangential flow ultrafiltration and polyethylene glycol precipitation. Processed samples were analysed for molecular detection of adenovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, parechovirus, enterovirus (EV), hepatitis A (HAV) and E (HEV) viruses. All wastewater samples (n = 54) contained viruses. On average, six and four virus species were detected in, respectively, raw and treated wastewater samples. EV-positive samples were tested for EV-D68 to assess its circulation in the community. EV-D68 was detected in seven of 27 raw samples. We collected data from clinical cases of EV-D68 (n = 17), HAV (n = 4) and HEV infection (n = 16) and compared wastewater-derived sequences with clinical sequences. We showed the silent circulation of EV-D68 in September 2015, the wide circulation of HAV despite few notifications of acute disease and the presence in wastewater of the major HEV subtypes involved in clinical local cases. The environmental surveillance overcomes the sampling bias intrinsic to the study of infections associated with hospitalisation and allows the detection in real time of viral sequences genetically close to those reported in clinical specimens.
人类肠道病毒在环境中具有抗性,并通过粪-口途径传播。废水中的病毒排放为追踪新出现的病原体和研究社区肠道传染病的流行病学提供了机会。本研究旨在通过分析城市污水监测法国克莱蒙费朗地区人群中肠道病毒的循环情况。在 2014 年 10 月至 2015 年 10 月期间收集了原始和处理后的污水,并使用切向流超滤和聚乙二醇沉淀两步法浓缩。对处理后的样品进行了分子检测,以检测腺病毒、诺如病毒、轮状病毒、肠道病毒(EV)、甲型肝炎(HAV)和戊型肝炎(HEV)病毒。所有污水样本(n=54)均含有病毒。平均而言,在原始和处理后的污水样本中分别检测到六种和四种病毒。对 EV 阳性样本进行 EV-D68 检测,以评估其在社区中的传播情况。在 27 个原始样本中,有 7 个检测到 EV-D68。我们收集了 EV-D68(n=17)、HAV(n=4)和 HEV 感染(n=16)的临床病例数据,并将污水中获得的序列与临床序列进行了比较。我们表明,EV-D68 在 2015 年 9 月处于沉默循环状态,HAV 的广泛传播尽管急性疾病的报告很少,以及污水中存在与临床本地病例相关的主要 HEV 亚型。环境监测克服了与住院相关感染研究中固有的采样偏差,并允许实时检测与临床标本中报告的序列在遗传上密切相关的病毒序列。