Wastewater provides indication of the degree of infection in population
FRANKFURT/AACHEN. Since the beginning of the pandemic, research groups have been working on methods to detect SARS-CoV-2 viruses in wastewater to be used to monitor the degree of COVID-19 transmission among the population. The idea is simple: since infected people shed SARS-CoV-2 viruses in their faeces, wastewater samples could give an indication of the infection numbers among all the residents connected to a wastewater treatment plant. Given sufficient sensitivity, these analyses could function as an early-warning system for authorities, allowing early detection of local case increases within the catchment area of a treatment plant.
A consortium of Frankfurt virologists,
ecotoxicologists and evolution researchers, and water researchers from Aachen
have now shown for the first time in Germany that SARS-CoV-2 genetic material
can be detected in treatment plants using modern molecular methods. Analyses revealed
3 to 20 gene equivalents per millilitre of raw wastewater in all nine treatment
plants tested during the first pandemic wave in April 2020. This concentration
level was also measured in studies in the Netherlands and the USA.
The researchers were astonished that older
retention samples from the years 2017 and 2018, before the outbreak of the
pandemic, also delivered signals. Extensive method validation revealed that the
gene primer erroneously registered not only SARS-CoV-2, but other non-disease
causing coronaviruses in wastewater as well. The current method, developed
specifically for SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater, has been confirmed through gene
sequencing.
The method can be now employed for what is
called wastewater-based epidemiology: the measured viral load of a treatment
plant allows conclusions on the number of COVID-19 infected individuals in the
catchment area. In the largest treatment plant, 1,037 acute cases were
estimated in the catchment area for a viral load of 6 trillion (6 x 1012)
gene equivalencies pro day; in smaller treatment plants with viral loads lower
by two orders of magnitude, 36 cases were estimated.
The sensitivity is sufficient as an early
warning system to indicate whether the action value of 50 incidents per 100,000
residents has been exceeded. Earlier hopes that the precision would be
sufficient to determine the estimated number infected people not reported
through laboratory diagnosis have not yet been fulfilled. However, the
scientists believe that further improvements in the methods are possible.
In vitro cell tests have shown that the
SARS-CoV-2 fragments verified in the wastewater are non-infectious. However, due
to the high loads and low retention capacity of conventional treatment plants,
the behaviour of SARS-CoV-2 in the water cycle should be investigated more
deeply. The authors of the study are working on making their knowledge
available for an application of the method soon, with the goal of achieving a
close cooperation between health ministries, environmental ministries,
treatment plant operators and professional associations.
The research team was formed on the
initiative of the non-profit Research Institute for Water and Waste Management
at RWTH Aachen (FiW), the Institute of Environmental Engineering at RWTH Aachen
(ISA), the Institute for Medical Virology at University Hospital Frankfurt (KGU)
and Department for Evolution Ecology and Environmental Toxicology at the
Institute of Ecology, Evolution and Diversity at Goethe University Frankfurt,
and is supported by six water boards in North Rhine-Westphalia, the LOEWE
Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG) and the University of
Saskatoon in Canada.
Publication: Sandra Westhaus,
Frank-Andreas Weber, Sabrina Schiwy, Volker Linnemann, Markus Brinkmann, Marek
Widera, Carola Greve, Axel Janke, Henner Hollert, Thomas Wintgens, Sandra
Ciesek. Detection
of SARS-CoV-2 in raw and treated wastewater in Germany – suitability for
COVID-19 surveillance and potential transmission risks. Science of the Total Environment. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141750, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969720352797
Further
information
University Hospital Frankfurt
Institute for Medical Virology
Prof.
Dr. Sandra Ciesek through
University Hospital Frankfurt Press Office
Tel.
+49 69 6301 86442
kommunikation@kgu.de
Goethe
University Frankfurt
Institute of Ecology, Evolution and
Diversity
Dept. Evolution Ecology and Environmental
Toxicology
and LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity
Genomics (TBG)
Prof. Dr. rer. nat.
Henner Hollert
hollert@bio.uni-frankfurt.de
Research Institute for Water and Waste
Management at RWTH Aachen (FiW)
Dr.
sc. Frank-Andreas Weber
weber@fiw.rwth-aachen.de
RWTH Aachen University
Institute of Environmental Engineering (ISA)
Univ.-Prof.
Dr.-Ing.
habil. Thomas Wintgens
wintgens@isa.rwth-aachen.de