Zhou, Jiachi Ding, Shichao Sandhu, Samar Chang, An-Yi Taechamahaphan, Anubhap Gudekar, Shipra Wang, Joseph
The intensifying global opioid crisis, majorly attributed to fentanyl (FT) and its analogs, has necessitated the development of rapid and ultrasensitive remote/on-site FT sensing modalities. However, current approaches for tracking FT exposure through wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) are unadaptable, time-consuming, and require trained professio...
Lee, Cheng-Shiuan Wang, Mian Nanjappa, Deepak Lu, Yi-Ta Meliker, Jaymie Clouston, Sean Gobler, Christopher J Venkatesan, Arjun K
Published in
Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology
The application of wastewater-based epidemiology to track the outbreak and prevalence of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in communities has been tested and validated by several researchers across the globe. However, the RNA-based surveillance has its inherent limitations and uncertainties. This study aims to complement the ongoing wastewater surveil...
Chigwechokha, Petros Nyirenda, Ruth Lusungu Dalitsani, Davie Namaumbo, Ranken Lorvin Kazembe, Yohanny Smith, Ted Holm, Rochelle H
Published in
Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology
In resource-limited regions, relying on individual clinical results to monitor community diseases is sometimes not possible. Establishing wastewater and non-sewered sanitation surveillance systems can offer opportunities to improve community health. We provide our experience of establishing a wastewater and non-sewered sanitation surveillance labor...
Qiang, Lin Chisheng, Yu Kaiyin, Chen Hamid, Yasir Ancheng, Luo Zhiwei, Liang Tianyu, Xu
Published in
The Science of the total environment
By 2021, rural regions in China were occupied by over 500 million residents, generating an annual volume of 19.5 billion m3 of rural domestic wastewater (RDW). This study aimed to investigate the occurrence and removal of micropollutants (MPs) in RDW treatment facilities and to perform a corresponding wastewater-based epidemiology analysis (WBE). O...
Wolken, Madeline Wang, Michael Schedler, Julia Campos, Roberto H Jr Ensor, Katherine Hopkins, Loren Treangen, Todd Stadler, Lauren B
Published in
The Science of the total environment
Wastewater monitoring is an efficient and effective way to surveil for various pathogens in communities. This is especially beneficial in areas of high transmission, such as preK-12 schools, where infections may otherwise go unreported. In this work, we apply wastewater disease surveillance using school and community wastewater from across Houston,...
Inson, Jessamine Gail M Malla, Bikash Amalin, Divina M Carvajal, Thaddeus M Enriquez, Ma Luisa D Hirai, Soichiro Raya, Sunayana Rahmani, Aulia Fajar Angga, Made Sandhyana Sthapit, Niva
...
Published in
The Science of the total environment
Manila, a highly urbanized city, is listed as one of the top cities with the highest recorded number of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases in the Philippines. This study aimed to detect and quantify the RNA of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and the Omicron variant in 51 wastewater samples collected from thre...
Kadoya, Syun-Suke Maeda, Hideo Katayama, Hiroyuki
Published in
The Science of the total environment
Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has been in the spotlight because of applicability of early detection of virus outbreak and new variants at the catchment area. However, there has been a notable absence of research directly confirming the association between SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater and patient specimens. In this study, we performed a quantitati...
Carducci, Annalaura Federigi, Ileana Lauretani, Giulia Muzio, Sara Pagani, Alessandra Atomsa, Nebiyu Tariku Verani, Marco
Published in
Food and environmental virology
During the COVID-19 pandemic, wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) and clinical surveillance have been used as tools for analyzing the circulation of SARS-CoV-2 in the community, but both approaches can be strongly influenced by some sources of variability. From the challenging perspective of integrating environmental and clinical data, we performed...
Geissler, Michael Mayer, Robin Helm, Björn Dumke, Roger
Published in
Food and environmental virology
Fecal shedding of SARS-CoV-2 leads to a renaissance of wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) as additional tool to follow epidemiological trends in the catchment of treatment plants. As alternative to the most commonly used composite samples in surveillance programs, passive sampling is increasingly studied. However, the many sorbent materials in dif...
El Soufi, G Di Jorio, L Gerber, Z Cluzel, N van Assche, J Delafoy, D Olaso, R Daviaud, C Loustau, T Schwartz, C
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Wastewater-based epidemiology is experiencing exponential development. Despite undeniable advantages compared to patient-centered approaches (cost, anonymity, survey of large populations without bias, detection of asymptomatic infected peoples…), major technical limitations persist. Among them is the low sensitivity of the current methods used for ...