2074. Longitudinal wastewater surveillance for endemic respiratory viruses and its correlation with clinically confirmed cases in Calgary, Canada
Abstract Background Wastewater (WW)-based surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 is an established tool for COVID-19 pandemic monitoring, providing a leading indicator to cases and hospitalizations. However, its potential for monitoring endemic respiratory viruses has not been elucidated. We assessed the occurr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Open forum infectious diseases 2023-11, Vol.10 (Supplement_2) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Background
Wastewater (WW)-based surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 is an established tool for COVID-19 pandemic monitoring, providing a leading indicator to cases and hospitalizations. However, its potential for monitoring endemic respiratory viruses has not been elucidated. We assessed the occurrence of Influenza A (IAV), Influenza B (IBV), and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) RNA in WW treatment plants (WWTP) in Alberta's largest city and its correlation with clinical disease.
Methods
Twenty-four-hour composite WW samples were collected weekly from three WWTP in Calgary between Mar'22/Apr'23. WW was concentrated and RNA extracted using the 4S-Silica Column. Viral RNA was quantified using a commercial TaqMan assay (IAV, Assay ID Vi99990011 po, Applied Biosystems) and established RT-qPCR assays targeting: the hemagglutinin gene (IBV) and nucleocapsid gene (RSV). Flow rates at each WWTP were used to create a composite city-wide metric for each target. WW values were compared to clinical data reported by Alberta Health Services and reported as total cases and test positivity rates across the Calgary Zone (or entire Province if granular data was unavailable).
Results
IAV peaked in Calgary's WW between November-December 2022, IBV between February-April 2023 and RSV between November 2022-February 2023 (Figure 1,2,3). The composite-IAV signal positively correlated with weekly confirmed clinical cases within the Calgary Zone (Spearman's r= 0.83, p< 0.0001 for signals recorded the same week, and r= 0.85, p< 0.0001 for the prior week). The positive correlation existed regardless of influenza typed as H3N2, H1N1 or untyped. Furthermore, specimen test positivity rates across the entire province correlated with Calgary's WW measured IAV (Spearman's r= 0.88, p< 0.0001). The IBV WW signal correlated with clinical cases (Spearman's r= 0.63, p< 0.0001) and test positivity rates (Spearman's r= 0.74, p< 0.0001) across the entire province. Calgary's RSV WW correlated with clinical cases (Spearman's r= 0.56, p=0.001) and test positivity rates (Spearman's r= 0.50, p=0.007) across Alberta.Figure 1.Comparison of aggregate WW IAV in Calgary compared to locally confirmed clinical cases.Figure 2.Trend of aggregate WW IBV signal in Calgary compared to clinically confirmed cases.Figure 3.Trend of aggregate signal in Alberta for RSV compared to clinically confirmed cases over time measured.
There is a peak in the RSV signal from November 2022 to February 2023, with a correlation to |
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ISSN: | 2328-8957 2328-8957 |
DOI: | 10.1093/ofid/ofad500.144 |