Who will lead the global surveillance of antimicrobial resistance via sewage?

For many, wastewater is simply contaminated, bacteria-filled water, but it is actually a valuable research resource. The water contains a wealth of information about e.g., the type of antimicrobial resistant bacteria and disease-causing microorganisms that are present in people in the collection area.

An international team of researchers led by the Technical University of Denmark, DTU, has proven that genomic analysis of sewage from around the world can produce important information about the exact type of bacteria that abound in certain areas. As such, analyzing sewage shows great potential as a surveillance tool.


Good addition to existing initiatives

In a peer-reviewed comment in the prestigious scientific journal Science, Professor Frank Møller Aarestrup of the DTU National Food Institute and Professor Mark E. J. Woolhouse of the University of Edinburgh outline both the many benefits of using wastewater in global disease surveillance and the limitations of this approach.

In their view, analyzing sewage is a good addition to existing surveillance initiatives, which predominantly operate on a national or regional level and generate data in relation to sick people. But the question is: Who will carry on the surveillance once their current project wraps up in 2023?

According to the two professors, one model is that the World Health Organization, WHO, and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, ECDC, take over the surveillance. These two actors have the mandate to head up such a programme.

Practically, this could be done once a year through the countries of the world collecting a few liters of sewage and sending them for analysis in a central location, such as e.g., the WHO Collaborating Centre on Antimicrobial Resistance. As more countries get the equipment and expertise to carry out part or all of the analysis, the responsibility for this part of the surveillance can be passed on to each country.

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Read more

Read Frank Møller Aarestrup and Mark E. J. Woolhouse’s comment in

Science:


Using sewage for surveillance of antimicrobial resistance

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Read about the researchers’ analysis of sewage collected in 74 cities in 60 countries in a press release from the National Food Institute: Sewage reveals levels of antimicrobial resistance worldwide

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The work to create a global surveillance system for antimicrobial resistance is carried out with funds from the Novo Nordisk Foundation in a six-year long project. Through its involvement with the project, the institute also helps to support the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal of ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being for all. Read more on the project’s website:

Global Surveillance

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The ambition of the National Food Institute’s Research Group for Genomic Epidemiology is to work with colleagues throughout the world to develop a system that makes it possible to exchange and interpret information in real time. As such, it would be possible to use the global surveillance data e.g., to manage diseases that threaten to spread beyond a country’s borders and develop into pandemics.


Contact

Professor Frank Møller Aarestrup,

[email protected]

, tel. 0045 3588 6281


FACTS


Many advantages to genome sequencing of sewage

Genome sequencing of sewage is quick and relatively cheap, and analysing sewage does not require ethical approval, as the material cannot be traced back to individuals. Furthermore, raw data from can be reused to examine other problems–such as discoveries of new resistance genes–that may emerge, even when this happens a long time after the samples are collected.

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-02/tuod-wwl021020.php

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