CDC To Monitor Sewage To Measure Spread Of COVID-19

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PHOTO CREDIT: SHUTTERSTOCK/VLADIMIR MULDER

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), in collaboration with agencies throughout the federal government, are initiating the National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS) in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The data generated by NWSS will “help public health officials to better understand the extent of COVID-19 infections in communities.” Read the press release from the CDC below.

CDC is currently developing a portal for state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments to submit wastewater testing data into a national database for use in summarizing and interpreting data for public health action. Participation in a national database will ensure data comparability across jurisdictions.

Data from wastewater testing is not meant to replace existing COVID-19 surveillance systems, but is meant to complement them by providing:

  • An efficient pooled community sample.
  • Data for communities where timely COVID-19 clinical testing is underutilized or unavailable.
  • Data at the sub-county level.

What is wastewater surveillance for COVID-19?

  • “Wastewater,” also referred to as “sewage,” includes water from household/building use (i.e., toilets, showers, sinks) that can contain human fecal waste, as well as water from non-household sources (i.e., rainwater and industrial use.)
  • Wastewater can be tested for RNA from SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
  • While SARS-CoV-2 can be shed in the feces of individuals with COVID-19, there is no information to date that anyone has become sick with COVID-19 because of direct exposure to treated or untreated wastewater.

What are the advantages of wastewater infectious disease surveillance?

  • Sewage testing has been successfully used as a method for early detection of other diseases, such as polio.
  • SARS-CoV-2 can be shed in the feces of individuals with symptomatic or asymptomatic infection; therefore, wastewater surveillance can capture data on both types of infection.
  • Nearly 80 percent of United States households are served by municipal sewage collection systems.
  • Quantitative SARS-CoV-2 measurements in untreated sewage can provide information on changes in total COVID-19 infection in the community contributing to that wastewater treatment plant (that area is known as the “sewershed.”)
  • Depending on the frequency of testing, sewage surveillance can be a leading indicator of changes in COVID-19 burden in a community.
  • SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection in sewage serves as a COVID-19 indicator that is independent of healthcare-seeking behaviors and access to clinical testing.

Is wastewater surveillance right for my community?

Wastewater surveillance for RNA of the virus that causes COVID-19 is a developing field. Health departments setting up a sewage-based infectious disease surveillance system should consider the following to generate data that is useful for public health response:

  • Sewage testing over time can provide trend data that can complement other surveillance data that informs public health decision making. However, at this time, it is not possible to reliably and accurately predict the number of infected individuals in a community based on sewage testing.
  • Community-level wastewater surveillance at a treatment plant will not capture homes on a septic-based system.
  • Community-level wastewater surveillance at a wastewater treatment plant also will not capture communities or facilities served by decentralized systems, such as prisons, universities, or hospitals that treat their waste.
  • Low levels of infection in a community may not be captured by sewage surveillance. The lower limits of detection (i.e., the smallest number of people shedding the virus in stool that can still be detected by current testing methods) for sewage surveillance are not yet well understood. More data on fecal shedding by infected individuals over the course of disease are needed to better understand the limits of detection.
  • All wastewater treatment plants may not be appropriate as sites for surveillance given their operations logistics (e.g., if sewage is pre-treated before it reaches the plant.)

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