Back to Search Start Over

Wastewater-based epidemiology for early warning of SARS-COV-2 circulation: A pilot study conducted in Sicily, Italy

Authors :
Carmelo Massimo Maida
Emanuele Amodio
Walter Mazzucco
Giuseppina La Rosa
Luca Lucentini
Elisabetta Suffredini
Mario Palermo
Gina Andolina
Francesca Rita Iaia
Fabrizio Merlo
Massimo Giuseppe Chiarelli
Angelo Siragusa
Francesco Vitale
Fabio Tramuto
Daniela Segreto
Pietro Schembri
Giuseppe Cuffari
Antonio Conti
Giovanni Casamassima
Andrea Polizzi
Mansueta Ferrara
Giuseppina Gullo
Angelo Lo Verde
Arianna Russo
Alessandra Casuccio
Claudio Costantino
Vincenzo Restivo
Palmira Immordino
Giorgio Graziano
Maida, Carmelo Massimo
Amodio, Emanuele
Mazzucco, Walter
La Rosa, Giuseppina
Lucentini, Luca
Suffredini, Elisabetta
Palermo, Mario
Andolina, Gina
Iaia, Francesca Rita
Merlo, Fabrizio
Chiarelli, Massimo Giuseppe
Siragusa, Angelo
Vitale, Francesco
Tramuto, Fabio
Segreto, Daniela
Schembri, Pietro
Cuffari, Giuseppe
Conti, Antonio
Casamassima, Giovanni
Polizzi, Andrea
Ferrara, Mansueta
Gullo, Giuseppina
Lo Verde, Angelo
Russo, Arianna
Casuccio, Alessandra
Costantino, Claudio
Restivo, Vincenzo
Immordino, Palmira
Graziano, Giorgio
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

There is increasing evidence of the use of wastewater-based epidemiology to integrate conventional monitoring assessing disease symptoms and signs of viruses in a specific territory. We present the results of SARS-CoV-2 environmental surveillance activity in wastewater samples collected between September 2020 and July 2021 in 9 wastewater treatment plants (WTPs) located in central and western Sicily, serving over 570,000 residents. The presence of SARS-CoV-2, determined in 206 wastewater samples using RT-qPCR assays, was correlated with the notified and geo-referenced cases on the areas served by the WTPs in the same study period. Overall, 51% of wastewater samples were positive. Samples were correlated with 33,807 SARS-CoV-2 cases, reported in 4 epidemic waves, with a cumulative prevalence of 5.9% among Sicilian residents. The results suggest that the daily prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 active cases was statistically significant and higher in areas with SARS-CoV-2 positive wastewater samples. According to these findings, the proposed method achieves a good sensitivity profile (78.3%) in areas with moderate or high viral circulation (≥133 cases/100,000 residents) and may represent a useful tool in the management of epidemics based on an environmental approach, although it is necessary to improve the accuracy of the process.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39101e243ff4d93e42adc02ded4f3240