Stamford Advocate

Yale: Waste testing turns up opioids

Antidepres­sants, chemicals also found during waste sampling for COVID-19

- By Christine Woodside This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Conn. Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit health news organizati­on.

Between March 19 and June 30, a group of scientists tested waste that had previously been used to detect COVID-19, looking for drugs and chemicals. The researcher­s found significan­t increases in three opioids, four antidepres­sants, and other chemicals in sludge from New Haven.

The analysis, by scientists from the Connecticu­t Agricultur­al Experiment Station and Yale University, offered the first glimpses of how the pandemic’s stay-at-home orders affected people’s behavior. It also underscore­d how important human waste can be as a resource for understand­ing public health and society’s habits. Diseases, drugs and chemicals all show up in feces, providing a major tool for public health studies.

Sara L. Nason, a CAES scientist, is leading the waste analysis, which found increases in fentanyl, hydromorph­one and methadone in sludge taken from primary settling tanks in New Haven.

Nason said the goal is to understand how the pandemic changed people’s habits and health.

“We hypothesiz­e that the changes in chemical concentrat­ions will reveal interestin­g trends that correlate with public health outcomes,” she said.

Fentanyl’s increase in the New Haven population reflected “both increased use in hospitals for patients on ventilator­s, and the nationwide trend of increases in accidental overdose deaths from illegal use,” Nason said.

Five years ago, the testing of human feces for substances “was something that I would talk to other people about, funding agencies, and they would kind of roll their eyes and say, ‘Yeah...’ It was not too much on the radar back then,” said Jordan Peccia, a professor of chemical and environmen­tal engineerin­g at Yale University.

Peccia is working with Nason on the analysis using frozen samples from another project on which Peccia is working, a COVID-19 testing effort that analyzes sludge from six Connecticu­t treatment plants. Peccia’s Yale laboratory collects data and publishes the informatio­n on a public website. The lab tests the concentrat­ed substance found at the bottom of the tanks where waste entering sewage plants in New Haven, Bridgeport, Hartford, New London, Norwich and Stamford goes to settle.

Peccia and at least eight other scientists hope to expand the sludge testing “to other diseases, to other viruses, to other locations around the world where they don’t have testing,” he said. They have applied for National Institutes of Health funding.

Rising drug levels

Besides the opioids, the scientists found six antidepres­sants in the sludge, and six disinfecta­nts. Sertraline (Zoloft) increased in March, before there were reported shortages of that drug. Three other drugs showed a clear rising trend over the spring: doxepin (Silenor), citalopram (Celeva), and amitriptyl­ine (Elavil). Tracking these drugs during the pandemic was important, Nason said, because studies have linked psychiatri­c illnesses and COVID-19.

Nason explained it this way: studies have shown “people with psychiatri­c illnesses are at risk for being diagnosed with COVID-19, and that COVID-19 infection is associated with new diagnoses of psychiatri­c illnesses.”

Three of the six cleaners they found in the sludge are common wipes and sprays with quaternary ammonium disinfecta­nts, known as quats, which scientists in the last decade have linked to The long but spotty history of reproducti­ve and developmen­tal testing sewage for disease dates problems in animals. to the 1960s and a Yale study of

Nason said the CAES/Yale the polio vaccine in Middletown. team’s research focused on “subFor at least 20 years scientists stances whose use we expect to have been studying sewage, but be affected by the pandemic, much of their work focused on such as antidepres­sants, opioids, environmen­tal issues. Human and antiviral drugs.” They comwaste can reveal whether inpiled their key findings in a postdustry is following environmen­er presented last fall to the Socital regulation­s, and scientists can ety for Environmen­tal Toxicology test for banned chemicals, such and Chemistry. They plan to as fire retardants, linked to cancer.submitrese­archpapers­forpublica­tion this winter. These studies analyze the

The findings were mostly desludge left in the bottom of pritected using a technique called mary tanks after the water has suspect screening, in which a settled. Scientists can also collect mass spectromet­er collects mohuman waste by sampling the lecular informatio­n and matches diluted soup of water and solid it through large databases. waste that flows under the

“Suspect screening is a very streets. powerful technique because you Peccia maintains that sampling don’t necessaril­y need to know the concentrat­ed sludge is the what chemicals you are looking most efficient method. Sewage for ahead of time,” Nason said. treatment “takes in wastewater

“You find whatever signals in and it separates the bad stuff your data match the database from the water. It puts out clean entries. For example, we did not initially decide to look at disinfecta­nts in the sludge, but we found several of them through our suspect screening analysis,” Nason said.

She added that they used other analytical standards to confirm their key findings, “so we are quite confident in our results.”

Peccia said the expansion of sludge testing could be used to study infectious diseases like norovirus; adenovirus­es, which cause fevers, diarrhea, and more; all of the coronaviru­ses that cause colds; and bacterial diseases like tuberculos­is and legionella, which causes legionnair­e’s disease.

Sewage as a resource

water, and then you have tons and tons and tons of material that was separated from that wastewater. Most of the bad stuff in the wastewater treatment plant gets left behind in the sludge,” he said.

However they are found — whether in the water known as “influent” or the settled sludge — Peccia said he estimates that more than half of infectious diseases show up in waste.

He said testing sewage could transform how doctors recognize and treat diseases where diagnosis is difficult and not always accurate, such as Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses, and Eastern equine encephalit­is and other mosquito-carried diseases.

Tracking substances such as nicotine, alcohol, heroin and opioids in sewage sludge shows how drug uses changes on weekends. “Those pieces of informatio­n are hard to come by otherwise,” Peccia said.

These studies will provide informatio­n that will correlate with other studies of human illness and behavior.

“If hospital prescripti­ons and disposals of fentanyl increase over the same period of time as fentanyl concentrat­ions in sludge increase, we can start to put together a story,” Nason said.

“But if that is not the case, the sludge data could be a sign for public health officials that illegal use needs to be further investigat­ed,” Nason continued. “Overall, the sludge findings are most valuable when they can be supported with data from other sources that relate them to public health.”

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