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      International snapshot of new psychoactive substance use: Case study of eight countries over the 2019/2020 new year period

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          Wastewater-Based Epidemiology: Global Collaborative to Maximize Contributions in the Fight Against COVID-19

          Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), a novel member of the Coronaviridae family, has been identified as the etiologic agent of an ongoing pandemic of severe pneumonia known as COVID-19. 1 To date there have been millions of cases of COVID-19 diagnosed in 184 countries with case fatality rates ranging from 1.8% in Germany to 12.5% in Italy. 2 Limited diagnostic testing capacity and asymptomatic and oligosymptomatic infections result in significant uncertainty in the estimated extent of SARS-CoV-2 infection. 3 Recent reports have documented that infection with SARS-CoV-2 is accompanied by persistent shedding of virus RNA in feces in 27% 4 to 89% of patients at densities from 0.8 to 7.5 log10 gene copies per gram. 5 The presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in feces raises the potential to survey sewage for virus RNA to inform epidemiological monitoring of COVID-19, which we refer to as wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE), 6 but is also known as environmental surveillance. 7 Several studies have reported the detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in wastewater in the early stages of local outbreaks, further supporting the technical viability of WBE. 8−10 WBE could be especially informative given that asymptomatic and oligosymptomatic infections are unlikely to be detected during clinical surveillance. In such instances, WBE can be used to determine the burden of undiagnosed infections at the population level, which is critical to refining estimates of case-fatality rates. Additionally, wastewater offers an aggregate sample from an entire community that is more easily accessible than pooled clinical samples. 11 Along with clinical data and other technological approaches, such as contact tracing, WBE could provide critical monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 transmission within a community including the beginning, tapering, or re-emergence of an epidemic (Figure 1 ). This approach mirrors previous efforts in environmental monitoring, for example poliovirus RNA, to inform mechanistic models of pathogen transmission dynamics. 12 Figure 1 In wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE), the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infections in a community could be estimated by enumerating the virus RNA in that community’s sewage and performing mass balances on virus shedding using population and sewage flow rate data. Such information can then inform public health responses to the outbreak. The ongoing pandemic provides a meaningful opportunity to field-test the hypothesis that WBE can be used to detect and manage infectious disease transmission in communities. Many research groups across the globe are mobilizing to monitor wastewater for SARS-CoV-2 RNA for this purpose. However, the quantitative relationship between RNA densities in sewage and human infection prevalence is dependent on many spatial and temporal variables. Importantly, these relationships must be examined in both urban settings with centralized wastewater facilities and rural and low-income settings with decentralized wastewater infrastructure. Assessing variation and uncertainty across such diverse settings requires the systematic harmonization and validation of methodologies across research groups. Therefore, to maximize the potential of the diverse WBE efforts underway, we propose a global effort to coordinate methodologies and data-sharing to maximize the yields of WBE for the current and future outbreaks of disease. The community will also benefit from including appropriate quantitative controls and standards as described previously by Bustin et al. 13 to ensure cross laboratory comparability and data defensibility. Efficient harmonization of sampling, quality control, and analysis methods in the near term and, in the future, widespread dissemination of the resulting data sets and publications will help to ensure a high-quality evaluation of WBE. In partnership with the Sewage Analysis CORe group Europe (SCORE) network and the Global Water Pathogen Project, we have launched the COVID-19 WBE Collaborative (https://www.covid19wbec.org/) as a hub to coordinate and promote the efforts of research groups undertaking WBE for COVID-19. The Web site will include content such as press releases, commentaries, and media content for public outreach and will be used to solicit participation in the collaborative and advertise events relevant to WBE. In the future, the site could also be used to host data sets and promulgate publications and presentations that result from the COVID-19 WBE Collaborative. We are pleased to invite our colleagues to join this effort at a level commensurate with their discretion. The Web site also links to two important platforms for ongoing collaboration. The first is a protocols.io workshare platform for methodological coordination. Research groups currently undertaking wastewater surveillance for SARS-CoV-2 RNA are invited to share their protocols to help produce comparable results across geographies and time scales. Important details include, but are not limited to, the timing, frequency, location, and volume of sampling, relevant metadata, sample storage, means of concentration, extraction, and quantification of nucleic acids and observed processing recoveries. As previously mentioned, harmonization in the execution, or at a minimum, the reporting of relevant details, will greatly enhance the robustness of resulting data sets for analyzing transmission dynamics at various spatial and temporal levels. The second platform linked through the Web site is a Slack workspace for informal communication regarding COVID-19 WBE. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve rapidly; therefore, any collaborative effort must include a platform for rapid communication. As we work to sample sewage in the midst of this pandemic, biosafety remains paramount. Beyond protocols for sample analysis, we encourage all interested parties to work together to ensure appropriate biosafety measures while conducting this important work. Additionally, we ask funding agencies and the wastewater industry to consider funding for collaborative research related to COVID-19 WBE. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic requires engineers and scientists to collaborate with population-based scientists, including epidemiologists, mathematical modelers and public health agencies. A multidisciplinary approach on a global scale is required for timely and high impact results to help society. To that end, we have established the COVID-19 WBE Collaborative to facilitate such collaboration and we encourage all interested parties to join us.
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            Wastewater-based epidemiology biomarkers: Past, present and future

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              New psychoactive substances: challenges for drug surveillance, control, and public health responses

              The rapid emergence since the mid-2000s of a large and diverse range of substances originally designed as legal alternatives to more established illicit drugs (pragmatically clustered and termed new psychoactive substances; [NPS]) has challenged traditional approaches to drug monitoring, surveillance, control, and public health responses. In this section of the Series, we describe the emergence of NPS and consider opportunities for strengthening the detection, identification, and responses to future substances of concern. First, we explore the definitional complexity of the term NPS. Second, we describe the origins and drivers surrounding NPS, including motivations for use. Third, we summarise evidence on NPS availability, use, and associated harms. Finally, we use NPS as a case example to explore challenges and opportunities for future drug monitoring, surveillance, control, and public health responses. We posit that the current means of responding to emerging substances might no longer be fit for purpose in a world in which different substances can be rapidly introduced, and where people who use drugs can change preferences on the basis of market availability.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Water Research
                Water Research
                Elsevier BV
                00431354
                April 2021
                April 2021
                : 193
                : 116891
                Article
                10.1016/j.watres.2021.116891
                ba5b580c-c637-4169-948b-7e5604a33a6d
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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