Print Email Facebook Twitter Normalisation of SARS-CoV-2 concentrations in wastewater Title Normalisation of SARS-CoV-2 concentrations in wastewater: The use of flow, electrical conductivity and crAssphage Author Langeveld, J.G. (TU Delft Sanitary Engineering; Partners4UrbanWater) Schilperoort, Remy (Partners4UrbanWater) Heijnen, Leo (KWR Water Cycle Research Institute) Elsinga, Goffe (KWR Water Cycle Research Institute) Schapendonk, Claudia E.M. (Erasmus MC) Fanoy, Ewout (Gemeente Rotterdam) de Schepper, Evelien I.T. (Erasmus MC) Koopmans, Marion P.G. (Erasmus MC) de Graaf, Miranda (Erasmus MC) Medema, G.J. (TU Delft Sanitary Engineering; KWR Water Cycle Research Institute; Michigan State University) Date 2023 Abstract Over the course of the Corona Virus Disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic in 2020–2022, monitoring of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 ribonucleic acid (SARS-CoV-2 RNA) in wastewater has rapidly evolved into a supplementary surveillance instrument for public health. Short term trends (2 weeks) are used as a basis for policy and decision making on measures for dealing with the pandemic. Normalisation is required to account for the dilution rate of the domestic wastewater that can strongly vary due to time- and location-dependent sewer inflow of runoff, industrial discharges and extraneous waters. The standard approach in sewage surveillance is normalisation using flow measurements, although flow based normalisation is not effective in case the wastewater volume sampled does not match the wastewater volume produced. In this paper, two alternative normalisation methods, using electrical conductivity and crAssphage have been studied and compared with the standard approach using flow measurements. For this, a total of 1116 24-h flow-proportional samples have been collected between September 2020 and August 2021 at nine monitoring locations. In addition, 221 stool samples have been analysed to determine the daily crAssphage load per person. Results show that, although crAssphage shedding rates per person vary greatly, on a population-level crAssphage loads per person per day were constant over time and similar for all catchments. Consequently, crAssphage can be used as a quantitative biomarker for populations above 5595 persons. Electrical conductivity is particularly suitable to determine dilution rates relative to dry weather flow concentrations. The overall conclusion is that flow normalisation is necessary to reliably determine short-term trends in virus circulation, and can be enhanced using crAssphage and/or electrical conductivity measurement as a quality check. Subject COVID-19NormalisationPublic healthSewage surveillance To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:44e0dfa9-505b-44e8-a5fa-1d21dbf19083 DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.161196 ISSN 0048-9697 Source Science of the Total Environment, 865 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2023 J.G. Langeveld, Remy Schilperoort, Leo Heijnen, Goffe Elsinga, Claudia E.M. Schapendonk, Ewout Fanoy, Evelien I.T. de Schepper, Marion P.G. Koopmans, Miranda de Graaf, G.J. Medema Files PDF 1_s2.0_S0048969722083000_main.pdf 2.64 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:44e0dfa9-505b-44e8-a5fa-1d21dbf19083/datastream/OBJ/view