Coupling freedom from disease principles and early warning from wastewater surveillance to improve health security

Author:

Larsen David A1ORCID,Collins Mary B2ORCID,Du Qian3,Hill Dustin2ORCID,Insaf Tabassum Z45,Kilaru Pruthvi1,Kmush Brittany L1,Middleton Frank6ORCID,Stamm Abigail4,Wilder Maxwell L7,Zeng Teng8,Green Hyatt7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health, Syracuse University , Syracuse, NY 13244 , USA

2. Department of Environmental Studies, SUNY ESF , Syracuse, NY 13210 , USA

3. Quadrant Biosciences, Inc , Syracuse, NY 13210 , USA

4. Bureau of Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology, New York State Department of Health , Albany, NY 12237 , USA

5. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University at Albany , Albany, NY 12222 , USA

6. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, SUNY Upstate Medical University , Syracuse, NY 13210 , USA

7. Department of Environmental Biology, SUNY ESF , Syracuse, NY 13210 , USA

8. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Syracuse University , Syracuse, NY 13244 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Infectious disease surveillance is vitally important to maintaining health security, but these efforts are challenged by the pace at which new pathogens emerge. Wastewater surveillance can rapidly obtain population-level estimates of disease transmission, and we leverage freedom from disease principles to make use of nondetection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater to estimate the probability that a community is free from SARS-CoV-2 transmission. From wastewater surveillance of 24 treatment plants across upstate New York from May through December of 2020, trends in the intensity of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater correlate with trends in COVID-19 incidence and test positivity (⍴ > 0.5), with the greatest correlation observed for active cases and a 3-day lead time between wastewater sample date and clinical test date. No COVID-19 cases were reported 35% of the time the week of a nondetection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater. Compared to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention levels of transmission risk, transmission risk was low (no community spared) 50% of the time following nondetection, and transmission risk was moderate or lower (low community spread) 92% of the time following nondetection. Wastewater surveillance can demonstrate the geographic extent of the transmission of emerging pathogens, confirming that transmission risk is either absent or low and alerting of an increase in transmission. If a statewide wastewater surveillance platform had been in place prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, policymakers would have been able to complement the representative nature of wastewater samples to individual testing, likely resulting in more precise public health interventions and policies.

Funder

New York State Department of Health

New York State Division of Environmental Conservation

Syracuse University

SUNY

ESF

Centers for Disease Control

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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