DCU Water Institute, School of Chemical Sciences, Dublin City University, Glasnevin, Dublin 9, Ireland.
Anal Methods. 2021 Feb 7;13(5):575-594. doi: 10.1039/d0ay02098b. Epub 2021 Jan 28.
Active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are increasingly being identified as contaminants of emerging concern (CECs). They have potentially detrimental ecological and human health impacts but most are not currently subject to environmental regulation. Addressing the life cycle of these pharmaceuticals plays a significant role in identifying the potential sources and understanding the environmental impact that pharmaceuticals may have in surface waters. The stability and biological activity of these "micro-pollutants" can lead to a pseudo persistence, with ensuing unknown chronic behavioural and health-related effects. Research that investigates pharmaceuticals predominantly focuses on their occurrence and effect within surface water environments. However, this review will help to collate this information with factors that affect their environmental concentration. This review focuses on six pharmaceuticals (clarithromycin, ciprofloxacin, sulfamethoxazole, venlafaxine, gemfibrozil and diclofenac), chosen because they are heavily consumed globally, have poor removal rates in conventional activated sludge wastewater treatment plants (CAS WWTPs), and are persistent in the aquatic environment. Furthermore, these pharmaceuticals are included in numerous published prioritisation studies and/or are on the Water Framework Directive (WFD) "Watch List" or are candidates for the updated Watch List (WL). This review investigates the concentrations seen in European Union (EU) surface waters and examines factors that influence final concentrations prior to release, thus giving a holistic overview on the source of pharmaceutical surface water pollution. A period of 10 years is covered by this review, which includes research from 2009-2020 examining over 100 published studies, and highlighting that pharmaceuticals can pose a severe risk to surface water environments, with each stage of the lifecycle of the pharmaceutical determining its concentration. This review additionally highlights the necessity to improve education surrounding appropriate use, disposal and waste management of pharmaceuticals, while implementing a source directed and end of pipe approach to reduce pharmaceutical occurrence in surface waters.
活性药物成分(APIs)越来越多地被确定为新出现的关注污染物(CECs)。它们对生态和人类健康可能产生潜在的有害影响,但大多数目前不受环境法规的限制。解决这些药物的生命周期问题在确定潜在来源和了解药物对地表水可能产生的环境影响方面起着重要作用。这些“微污染物”的稳定性和生物活性可能导致虚假持久性,从而产生未知的慢性行为和健康相关影响。研究主要关注这些药物在地表水环境中的存在和影响。然而,本综述将有助于收集这些信息,并与影响其环境浓度的因素相结合。本综述重点介绍了六种药物(克拉霉素、环丙沙星、磺胺甲恶唑、文拉法辛、吉非罗齐和双氯芬酸),选择它们是因为它们在全球范围内大量使用,在传统的活性污泥废水处理厂(CAS WWTPs)中去除率低,并且在水生环境中持久存在。此外,这些药物被包含在许多已发布的优先排序研究中,或者被列入了水框架指令(WFD)的“观察名单”或更新的观察名单(WL)候选名单中。本综述调查了欧盟地表水的浓度,并研究了在释放之前影响最终浓度的因素,从而全面概述了药物地表水污染的来源。本综述涵盖了 10 年的时间,包括 2009 年至 2020 年期间的研究,检查了 100 多项已发表的研究,强调了药物对地表水环境可能构成严重威胁,药物生命周期的每个阶段都决定了其浓度。本综述还强调了必须加强教育,以提高对药物的合理使用、处置和废物管理,同时实施针对源头和末端的方法,以减少药物在地表水中的出现。