Department of Hydrology, Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India; International Water Management Institute, New Delhi, India; Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Nebraska Lincoln, United States.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Mar 20;917:170433. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.170433. Epub 2024 Jan 28.
Antibiotic resistance is a globally recognized health concern which leads to longer hospital stays, increased morbidity, increased mortality, and higher medical costs. Understanding how antibiotic resistance persists and exchanges in environmental systems like soil, water, and wastewater are critically important for understanding the emergence of pathogens with new resistance profiles and the subsequent exposure of people who indirectly/directly come in contact with these pathogens. There are concerns about the widespread application of prophylactic antibiotics in the clinical and agriculture sectors, as well as chemicals/detergents used in food and manufacturing industries, especially the quaternary ammonium compounds which have been found responsible for the generation of resistant genes in water and soil. The rates of horizontal gene transfer increase where there is a lack of proper water/wastewater infrastructure, high antibiotic manufacturing industries, or endpoint users - such as hospitals and intensive agriculture. Conventional wastewater treatment technologies are often inefficient in the reduction of ARB/ARGs and provide the perfect combination of conditions for the development of antibiotic resistance. The wastewater discharged from municipal facilities may therefore be enriched with bacterial communities/pathogens and provide a suitable environment (due to the presence of nutrients and other pollutants) to enhance the transfer of antibiotic resistance. However, facilities with tertiary treatment (either traditional/emerging technologies) provide higher rates of reduction. This review provides a synthesis of the current understanding of wastewater treatment and antibiotic resistance, examining the drivers that may accelerate their possible transmission to a different environment, and highlighting the need for tertiary technologies used in treatment plants for the reduction of resistant bacteria/genes.
抗生素耐药性是一个全球性的健康问题,它导致住院时间延长、发病率增加、死亡率增加和医疗费用增加。了解抗生素耐药性如何在土壤、水和废水等环境系统中持续存在和传播,对于了解具有新耐药谱的病原体的出现以及随后接触这些病原体的间接/直接人群的暴露至关重要。人们担心在临床和农业领域广泛应用预防性抗生素,以及食品和制造业中使用的化学品/洗涤剂,特别是季铵化合物,这些化合物已被发现是导致水和土壤中产生耐药基因的原因。在缺乏适当的水/废水基础设施、高抗生素制造工业或最终用户(如医院和集约化农业)的情况下,水平基因转移的速度会增加。传统的废水处理技术通常不能有效地减少 ARB/ARGs,并为抗生素耐药性的发展提供了理想的条件组合。因此,来自市政设施的废水可能富含细菌群落/病原体,并提供一个适宜的环境(由于存在营养物质和其他污染物),以增强抗生素耐药性的转移。然而,具有三级处理(传统/新兴技术)的设施提供了更高的减少率。本综述提供了对废水处理和抗生素耐药性的当前理解的综合,考察了可能加速其向不同环境传播的驱动因素,并强调了在处理厂中使用三级技术减少耐药细菌/基因的必要性。