Kuhn Katrin Gaardbo, Shukla Rishabh, Mannell Mike, Graves Grant M, Miller A Caitlin, Vogel Jason, Malloy Kimberly, Deshpande Gargi, Florea Gabriel, Shelton Kristen, Jeffries Erin, De León Kara B, Stevenson Bradley
Department of Biostatistics & Epidemiology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK 73104, USA.
School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019, USA.
Microorganisms. 2023 Aug 30;11(9):2193. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms11092193.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, wastewater surveillance was widely used to monitor temporal and geographical infection trends. Using this as a foundation, a statewide program for routine wastewater monitoring of gastrointestinal pathogens was established in Oklahoma. The results from 18 months of surveillance showed that wastewater concentrations of , and norovirus exhibit similar seasonal patterns to those observed in reported human cases (F = 4-29, < 0.05) and that wastewater can serve as an early warning tool for increases in cases, offering between one- and two-weeks lead time. Approximately one third of outbreak alerts in wastewater correlated in time with confirmed outbreaks of or and our results further indicated that several outbreaks are likely to go undetected through the traditional surveillance approach currently in place. Better understanding of the true distribution and burden of gastrointestinal infections ultimately facilitates better disease prevention and control and reduces the overall socioeconomic and healthcare related impact of these pathogens. In this respect, wastewater represents a unique opportunity for monitoring infections in real-time, without the need for individual human testing. With increasing demands for sustainable and low-cost disease surveillance, the usefulness of wastewater as a long-term method for tracking infectious disease transmission is likely to become even more pronounced.
在新冠疫情期间,废水监测被广泛用于监测感染的时间和地理趋势。以此为基础,俄克拉荷马州建立了一项针对胃肠道病原体的全州常规废水监测计划。18个月的监测结果表明, 、 和诺如病毒的废水浓度呈现出与报告的人类病例中观察到的类似季节性模式(F = 4 - 29,P < 0.05),并且废水可作为病例增加的预警工具,提前一到两周发出预警。废水中约三分之一的疫情警报与已确诊的 或 疫情在时间上相关,我们的结果进一步表明,通过目前的传统监测方法,可能有几起疫情未被发现。更好地了解胃肠道感染的真实分布和负担最终有助于更好地预防和控制疾病,并减少这些病原体对社会经济和医疗保健的总体相关影响。在这方面,废水为实时监测感染提供了独特的机会,无需对个体进行检测。随着对可持续和低成本疾病监测的需求不断增加,废水作为追踪传染病传播的长期方法的实用性可能会变得更加显著。