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Refining the estimation of amphetamine consumption by wastewater-based epidemiology

Authors :
Jianfa Gao
Daniel A. Burgard
Benjamin J. Tscharke
Foon Yin Lai
Jake W. O'Brien
Hien D. Nguyen
Qiuda Zheng
Jiaying Li
Peng Du
Xiqing Li
Degao Wang
Sara Castiglioni
Copytzy Cruz-Cruz
Jose Antonio Baz-Lomba
Viviane Yargeau
Erik Emke
Kevin V. Thomas
Jochen F. Mueller
Phong K. Thai
Source :
Water research. 225
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Consumption of amphetamine and methamphetamine, two common illicit drugs, has been monitored by wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) in many countries over the past decade. There is potential for the estimated amount of amphetamine used to be skewed at locations where methamphetamine is also consumed, because amphetamine is also excreted to wastewater following methamphetamine consumption. The present study aims to review the available data in the literature to identify an average ratio of amphetamine/methamphetamine (AMP/METH) that is excreted to wastewater after methamphetamine consumption. This ratio could then be used to refine the estimation of amphetamine consumption in catchments where there is both amphetamine and methamphetamine use. Using data from more than 6000 wastewater samples from Australia where methamphetamine is the dominant illicit amphetamine-type substance on the market, we were able to subtract the contribution of legal sources of amphetamine contribution and obtain the median AMP/METH ratio in wastewater of 0.09. Using this value, the amphetamine derived from methamphetamine consumption can be calculated and subtracted from the total amphetamine mass loads in wastewater samples. Without considering the contribution of amphetamine from methamphetamine use, selected European catchments with comparable consumption of amphetamine and methamphetamine showed up to 83% overestimation of amphetamine use. For catchments with AMP/METH ratio greater than 1.00, the impact of amphetamine from methamphetamine would be negligible; for catchments with AMP/METH ratio in the range of 0.04-0.19, it will be difficult to accurately estimate amphetamine consumption.

Details

ISSN :
18792448
Volume :
225
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b980b962e20b04088da1cf04798762d3