30 results on '"Castiglioni, Sara"'
Search Results
2. Mass spectrometric strategies for the investigation of biomarkers of illicit drug use in wastewater
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Hernandez, Felix, Castiglioni, Sara, Covaci, Adrian, de Voogt, Pim, Emke, Erik, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Ort, Christoph, Reid, Malcolm, Vicente Sancho, Juan, Thomas, Kevin V., van Nuijs, Alexander, Zuccato, Ettore, and Bijlsma, Lubertus
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Drugs of abuse ,Chemistry ,Mass spectrometry ,Urinary Metabolites ,Wastewater-based epidemiology ,Biology - Abstract
The analysis of illicit drugs in urban wastewater is the basis of wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE), and has received much scientific attention because the concentrations measured can be used as a new non-intrusive tool to provide evidence-based and real-time estimates of community-wide drug consumption. Moreover, WBE allows monitoring patterns and spatial and temporal trends of drug use. Although information and expertise from other disciplines is required to refine and effectively apply WBE, analytical chemistry is the fundamental driver in this field. The use of advanced analytical techniques, commonly based on combined chromatographymass spectrometry, is mandatory because the very low analyte concentration and the complexity of samples (raw wastewater) make quantification and identification/confirmation of illicit drug biomarkers (IDBs) troublesome. We review the most-recent literature available (mostly from the last 5 years) on the determination of IDBs in wastewater with particular emphasis on the different analytical strategies applied. The predominance of liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry to quantify target IDBs and the essence to produce reliable and comparable results is illustrated. Accordingly, the importance to perform inter-laboratory exercises and the need to analyze appropriate quality controls in each sample sequence is highlighted. Other crucial steps in WBE, such as sample collection and sample pre-treatment, are briefly and carefully discussed. The article further focuses on the potential of high-resolution mass spectrometry. Different approaches for target and non-target analysis are discussed, and the interest to perform experiments under laboratory-controlled conditions, as a complementary tool to investigate related compounds (e.g., minor metabolites and/or transformation products in wastewater) is treated. The article ends up with the trends and future perspectives in this field from the authors point of view.
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- 2018
3. Drug Use by Music Festival Attendees: A Novel Triangulation Approach Using Self-Reported Data and Test Results of Oral Fluid and Pooled Urine Samples.
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Gjerde, Hallvard, Gjersing, Linn, Baz-Lomba, Jose Antonio, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Salgueiro-González, Noelia, Furuhaugen, Håvard, Bretteville-Jensen, Anne Line, Hernández, Félix, Castiglioni, Sara, Johanna Amundsen, Ellen, and Zuccato, Ettore
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HOLIDAYS ,NORWEGIAN music ,AMPHETAMINES ,COCAINE ,DRUG use testing ,DRUGS of abuse ,FLUIDS ,KETAMINE ,ECSTASY (Drug) ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SELF-evaluation ,URINALYSIS - Abstract
Background: Self-reported data are commonly used when investigating illicit substance use. However, self-reports have well-known limitations such as limited recall and socially desirable responding. Mislabeling or adulteration of drugs on the illicit market may also cause incorrect reporting. Objectives: We aimed to examine what could be gained in terms of illicit drug use findings among music festival attendees when including biological sample test results in the assessment. Methods: We included 651 attendees at three music festivals in Norway from June to August 2016. Self-reported drug use was recorded using questionnaires, and samples of oral fluid were analyzed to detect use of illicit drugs. In addition, we analyzed samples of pooled urine from portable toilets at each festival. Results: All methods identified cannabis, MDMA, and cocaine as the most commonly used drugs. Overall, 6.6% of respondents reported use of illicit substances during the previous 48 hours. Oral fluid testing identified a larger number of drug users as 12.6% tested positive for illicit drugs. In oral fluid testing, we identified ketamine and three new psychoactive substances (NPS) that had not been reported on the questionnaire. In pooled urine testing, we identified amphetamine and three additional NPS that were neither reported used nor found in oral fluid samples. Conclusions/Importance: Drug testing of biological samples proved to be an important supplement to self-reports as a larger number of illicit substances could be detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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4. Spatial differences and temporal changes in illicit drug use in Europe quantified by wastewater analysis
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Ort, Christoph, Nuijs, Alexander L. N., Berset, Jean-Daniel, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Castiglioni, Sara, Covaci, Adrian, Voogt, Pim, Emke, Erik, Fatta-Kassinos, Despo, Griffiths, Paul, Hernandez, Félix, Gonzalez-Marino, Iria, Grabic, Roman, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Mastroianni, Nicola, Meierjohann, Axel, Nefau, Thomas, Ostman, Marcus, Pico, Yolanda, Racamonde, Ines, Reid, Malcolm, Slobodnik, Jaroslav, Terzic, Senka, Thomaidis, Nikolaos, Thomas, Kevin V., Fatta-Kassinos, Despo [0000-0003-1173-0941], and Earth Surface Science (IBED, FNWI)
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cannabis ,Time Factors ,Ecstasy ,Methamphetamines ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Sewage ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Mass Spectrometry ,Methamphetamine ,Cocaine ,Medicine ,Water treatment ,Drug use ,Amphetamine ,cocaine ,drugs of abuse ,ecstasy ,methamphetamine ,sewage ,biology ,Cannabis ,Drugs of abuse ,6. Clean water ,Europe ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Wastewater ,Population Surveillance ,Drug Abuse And Alcoholism ,Environmental Monitoring ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Illicit drug ,Psychiatry ,Cannabinoids ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,Amphetamines ,Research Reports ,European population ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Metropolitan area ,Human medicine ,business ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Aims To perform wastewater analyses to assess spatial differences and temporal changes of illicit drug use in a large European population. Design Analyses of raw wastewater over a 1-week period in 2012 and 2013. Setting and Participants Catchment areas of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) across Europe, as follows: 2012: 25 WWTPs in 11 countries (23 cities, total population 11.50 million); 2013: 47 WWTPs in 21 countries (42 cities, total population 24.74 million). Measurements Excretion products of five illicit drugs (cocaine, amphetamine, ecstasy, methamphetamine, cannabis) were quantified in wastewater samples using methods based on liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Findings Spatial differences were assessed and confirmed to vary greatly across European metropolitan areas. In general, results were in agreement with traditional surveillance data, where available. While temporal changes were substantial in individual cities and years (P ranging from insignificant to −3), overall means were relatively stable. The overall mean of methamphetamine was an exception (apparent decline in 2012), as it was influenced mainly by four cities. Conclusions Wastewater analysis performed across Europe provides complementary evidence on illicit drug consumption and generally concurs with traditional surveillance data. Wastewater analysis can measure total illicit drug use more quickly and regularly than is the current norm for national surveys, and creates estimates where such data does not exist.
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- 2014
5. Genotoxic effects induced by the exposure to an environmental mixture of illicit drugs to the zebra mussel.
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Parolini, Marco, Magni, Stefano, Castiglioni, Sara, and Binelli, Andrea
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DRUGS of abuse ,ZEBRA mussel ,GENETIC toxicology ,FRESHWATER ecology ,BENZOYLECGONINE ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Despite the growing interest on the presence of illicit drugs in freshwater ecosystems, just recently the attention has been focused on their potential toxicity towards non-target aquatic species. However, these studies largely neglected the effects induced by exposure to complex mixtures of illicit drugs, which could be different compared to those caused by single psychoactive molecules. This study was aimed at investigating the genetic damage induced by a 14-day exposure to a realistic mixture of the most common illicit drugs found in surface waters worldwide (cocaine, benzoylecgonine, amphetamine, morphine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) on the zebra mussel ( Dreissena polymorpha ). The mixture caused a significant increase of DNA fragmentation and triggered the apoptotic process and micronuclei formation in zebra mussel hemocytes, pointing out its potential genotoxicity towards this bivalve species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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6. Illicit drug consumption estimated by wastewater analysis in different districts of Milan: A case study.
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Castiglioni, Sara, Borsotti, Andrea, Riva, Francesco, and Zuccato, Ettore
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DRUG abuse , *SEWAGE analysis , *DRUG use testing , *SUBSTANCE abuse research , *DRUGS of abuse , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LIQUID chromatography , *MASS spectrometry , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *POLLUTANTS , *RESEARCH , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Introduction and Aims: Wastewater analysis is a new approach developed to estimate illicit drug (ID) consumption in large communities, such as a city. We tested the ability of this approach to detect differences in consumption in different districts of a city.Design and Methods: Consumption of cocaine, heroin, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (cannabis active principle), amphetamine, methamphetamine and ecstasy was estimated by analysis of selected drug excretion residues in composite 24 h samples of untreated urban wastewater by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Samples were collected from the inlet of the three main Milan wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), each serving a district of the city (west, center and east). In each WWTP, samples were taken daily for seven consecutive days in November 2010 and March 2011.Results: We observed significant differences of ID consumption (expressed as mg/day/1000 inhabitants) among districts: consumption of some ID was significantly higher in the eastern district (P < 0.01 for THC, P < 0.001 for cocaine and P < 0.0001 for heroin by one-way analysis of variance), while consumption of methamphetamine and amphetamine was higher in the central area (P < 0.0001). Overall, from 2010 to 2011, ID consumption decreased in all the districts, in line with a recent population survey showing decreases from 25 to 55% in the annual prevalence of ID users in Italy.Discussion and Conclusions: This approach may help to detect ID consumption in different districts of a city and may be useful for planning interventions aimed at specific city areas and substances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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7. Screening of pharmaceuticals and illicit drugs in wastewater and surface waters of Spain and Italy by high resolution mass spectrometry using UHPLC-QTOF MS and LC-LTQ-Orbitrap MS.
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Bade, Richard, Rousis, Nikolaos, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Gracia-Lor, Emma, Castiglioni, Sara, Sancho, Juan, and Hernandez, Felix
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DRUGS of abuse ,INDUSTRIAL wastes ,WATER analysis ,MASS spectrometry - Abstract
The existence of pharmaceuticals and illicit drugs (PIDs) in environmental waters has led many analytical chemists to develop screening methods for monitoring purposes. Water samples can contain a huge number of possible contaminants, commonly at low concentrations, which makes their detection and identification problematic. Liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) has proven itself effective in the screening of environmental contaminants. The present work investigates the use of the most popular HRMS instruments, quadrupole time-of-flight and linear trap quadrupole-Orbitrap, from two different laboratories. A suspect screening for PIDs was carried out on wastewater (influent and effluent) and surface water samples from Castellón, Eastern Spain, and Cremona, Northern Italy, incorporating a database of 107 PIDs (including 220 fragment ions). A comparison between the findings of both instruments and of the samples was made which highlights the advantages and drawbacks of the strategies applied in each case. In total, 28 compounds were detected and/or identified by either/both instruments with irbesartan, valsartan, benzoylecgonine and caffeine being the most commonly found compounds across all samples. [Figure not available: see fulltext.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Testing wastewater to detect illicit drugs: State of the art, potential and research needs.
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Castiglioni, Sara, Thomas, Kevin V., Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Vandam, Liesbeth, and Griffiths, Paul
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DRUGS of abuse , *EXTERNALITIES , *DRUG addiction , *ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring , *DRUG monitoring , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Illicit drug use is a global phenomenon involving millions of individuals, which results in serious health and social costs. The chemical analysis of urban wastewater for the excretion products of illicit drugs is a potent approach for monitoring patterns and trends of illicit drug use in a community. The first international and multidisciplinary conference on this topic was recently organized to present the epidemiological knowledge of patterns in drug use and the information obtained from wastewater analysis. This paper gives an overview of the main issues that emerged during the conference, focusing on the identified research gaps and requirements and on the future challenges and opportunities from bringing together wastewater analysis and drug epidemiology. The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) uses an established multi-indicator system to monitor illicit drug use and to identify the emergence of new psychoactive substances. The methodological challenges of monitoring a hidden and stigmatized behavior like drug use include the limitations of self-report data and reporting delays. An increasing evidence base suggests that wastewater analysis can address some of these problems. Specifically this technique can: monitor temporal and spatial trends in drug use at different scales, provide updated estimates of drug use, and identify changing habits and the use of new substances. A best practice protocol developed by a Europe-wide network of experts is available to produce homogeneous and comparable data at different sites. The systematic evaluation of uncertainties related to wastewater analysis has highlighted which areas require careful control and those that need further investigation to generally improve the approach. Wastewater analysis has considerable potential to complement existing approaches for monitoring drug use due to its ability to produce objective, real-time estimates of drug use and to give timely information of any change in the patterns of use. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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9. Evaluation of Uncertainties Associated with the Determination of Community Drug Use through the Measurement of Sewage Drug Biomarkers.
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Castiglioni, Sara, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Covaci, Adrian, Emke, Erik, Hernández, Félix, Reid, Malcolm, Ort, Christoph, Thomas, Kevin V., van Nuijs, Alexander L. N., de Voogt, Pim, and Zuccato, Ettore
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DRUGS of abuse , *UNCERTAINTY , *BIOMARKERS , *SEWAGE analysis , *COCAINE abuse , *ANALYTICAL chemistry - Abstract
The aim of this study was to integrally address the uncertainty associated with all the steps used to estimate community drug consumption through the chemical analysis of sewage biomarkers of illicit drugs. Uncertainty has been evaluated for sampling, chemical analysis, stability of drug biomarkers in sewage, back-calculation of drug use (specific case of cocaine), and estimation of population size in a catchment using data collected from a recent Europe-wide investigation and from the available literature. The quality of sampling protocols and analytical measurements has been evaluated by analyzing standardized questionnaires collected from 19 sewage treatments plants (STPs) and the results of an interlaboratory study (ILS), respectively. Extensive reviews of the available literature have been used to evaluate stability of drug biomarkers in sewage and the uncertainty related to back-calculation of cocaine use. Different methods for estimating population size in a catchment have been compared and the variability among the collected data was very high (7-55%). A reasonable strategy to reduce uncertainty was therefore to choose the most reliable estimation case by case. In the other cases, the highest uncertainties are related to the analysis of sewage drug biomarkers (uncertainty as relative standard deviation; RSD: 6-26% from ILS) and to the back-calculation of cocaine use (uncertainty; RSD: 26%). Uncertainty can be kept below 10% in the remaining steps, if specific requirements outlined in this work are considered. For each step, a best practice protocol has been suggested and discussed to reduce and keep to a minimum the uncertainty of the entire procedure and to improve the reliability of the estimates of drug use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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10. Changes in illicit drug consumption patterns in 2009 detected by wastewater analysis
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Zuccato, Ettore, Castiglioni, Sara, Tettamanti, Mauro, Olandese, Raffaela, Bagnati, Renzo, Melis, Manuela, and Fanelli, Roberto
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DRUGS of abuse , *SEWAGE disposal plants , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *DRUG utilization , *CONSUMERS , *TRENDS , *METHAMPHETAMINE - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Wastewater analysis can provide estimates of illicit drug (ID) consumption in local communities. Methods: We used repeated raw wastewater analysis in urban wastewater treatment plants to estimate loads of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and cannabis consumed daily by the inhabitants of two cities in Northern Italy, Milan and Como, from 2005 to 2009. Results: Daily cocaine loads did not change in Milan from 2005 to 2008 but fell 45% in 2009 (ANOVA, p <0.001, followed by Tukey–Kramer HSD test [2009 vs. others], p <0.05), and there was a similar drop in Como (41%, p <0.0001, t-test). Heroin also fell from 2008 to 2009 in Milan (66%, ANOVA, p <0.001, followed by Tukey–Kramer [2009 vs. others], p <0.05) and Como (26%, p =0.017, t-test). However, methamphetamine, which had risen in Milan from 2005 to 2008, rose further in 2009 (Kruskal–Wallis test, p <0.001, followed by Steel–Dwass [2009 or 2008 vs. previous], p <0.05), and cannabis, which was falling from 2005 to March 2009, rose again in September 2009 (40%, p =0.027, t-test). Conclusions: Results suggest a trend toward a decrease in consumption of costly ID, such as cocaine and heroin. This might be due to a reduction in the number of consumers and/or to a change in their behaviour since there was also an increase in the consumption of less expensive ID. This itself might reflect a drop in consumers’ money supply, caused by the economic crisis. Wastewater analysis was useful to estimate ID consumption levels in local communities in real time and promptly identify changes in trends. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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11. Illicit drug consumption estimations derived from wastewater analysis: A critical review
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van Nuijs, Alexander L.N., Castiglioni, Sara, Tarcomnicu, Isabela, Postigo, Cristina, de Alda, Miren Lopez, Neels, Hugo, Zuccato, Ettore, Barcelo, Damia, and Covaci, Adrian
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DRUGS of abuse , *DRUG utilization , *INDUSTRIAL wastes , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *METABOLITES , *CHROMATOGRAPHIC analysis , *MASS spectrometry , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Abstract: The consumption of illicit drugs causes indisputable societal and economic damage. Therefore it is necessary to know their usage levels and trends for undertaking targeted actions to reduce their use. Recently, a new approach (namely sewage epidemiology) was developed for the estimation of illicit drug use based on measurements of urinary excreted illicit drugs and their metabolites in untreated wastewater. This review aims at critically evaluating the published literature and identifying research gaps of sewage epidemiology. Firstly, the existing analytical procedures for the determination of the four most used classes of illicit drugs worldwide (cannabis, cocaine, opiates and amphetamine-like stimulants) and their metabolites in wastewater are summarized and discussed. The focus lies on the sample preparation and on the analysis with chromatographic techniques coupled to mass spectrometry. Secondly, back-calculations used to transform measured concentrations in wastewater (in ng/L) into an amount of used illicit drug (in g/day per 1000 inhabitants or doses/day per 1000 inhabitants) are discussed in detail for the four groups of illicit drugs. Sewage epidemiology data from Spain, Belgium, UK, Italy, Switzerland and USA are summarized and compared with data from international organisations, such as the European Monitoring Centre for Drug and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). The results derived from wastewater analysis show in general good agreement with existing prevalence data (percentage of a population that uses illicit drugs at a given time) and demonstrate the potential of sewage epidemiology. However, this review confirms that future work should focus on further optimisation and standardisation of various important parameters (e.g. sample collection and back-calculations). In the future, sewage epidemiology could be used in routine drug monitoring campaigns as a valuable tool in addition to the classical socio-epidemiological studies for the determination of local, national and international illicit drug use. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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12. Estimating Community Drug Abuse by Wastewater Analysis.
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Zuccato, Ettore, Chiabrando, Chiara, Castiglioni, Sara, Bagnati, Renzo, and Fanelli, Roberto
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DRUG abuse ,DRUG abuse prevention ,DRUG utilization ,SEWAGE analysis ,SEWAGE sampling ,FORENSIC mass spectrometry ,URINALYSIS ,DRUGS of abuse ,PUBLIC health research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The social and medical problems of drug abuse are a matter of increasing global concern. To tackle drug abuse in changing scenarios, international drug agencies need fresh methods to monitor trends and patterns of illicit drug consumption. OBJECTIVE: We tested a sewage epidemiology approach, using levels of excreted drug residues in wastewater, to monitor collective use of the major drugs of abuse in near real time. METHODS: Selected drug target residues derived from use of cocaine, opiates, cannabis, and amphetamines were measured by mass spectrometry in wastewater collected at major sewage treatment plants in Milan (Italy), Lugano (Switzerland), and London (United Kingdom). The amounts of drug residues conveyed to the treatment plants, reflecting the amounts collectively excreted with urine, were used to estimate consumption of the active parent drugs. RESULTS: Reproducible and characteristic profiles of illicit drug use were obtained in the three cities, thus for the first time quickly revealing changes in local consumption (e.g., cocaine consumption rose significantly on weekends in Milan). Profiles of local drug consumption based on wastewater measurements are in line with national annual prevalence estimates. CONCLUSIONS: Patterns and trends of drug abuse in local communities can be promptly monitored by this tool, a convenient new complement to more complex, lengthy survey methods. In principle, searching the sewage for excreted compounds relevant to public health issues appears to have the potential to become a convenient source of real-time epidemiologic information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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13. Illicit drugs, a novel group of environmental contaminants
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Zuccato, Ettore, Castiglioni, Sara, Bagnati, Renzo, Chiabrando, Chiara, Grassi, Paola, and Fanelli, Roberto
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EMERGING contaminants , *DRUGS of abuse , *TOTAL maximum daily load for water pollutants , *WATER quality monitoring , *STORM drains , *URBAN hydrology - Abstract
It is now well established that residues from therapeutic drugs consumed by humans can end up, through the sewage system, in the surface water of populated areas. Given that the global production of major illicit drugs is comparable to that of widely used pharmaceuticals, we tested for the presence of drugs of abuse (cocaine, opioids, amphetamines and cannabis derivatives), some related opioid pharmaceuticals (codeine and methadone) and/or their metabolites in Italian and British surface waters. Having identified residues of all major drugs of abuse in raw and treated urban wastewater, we now measured their levels in several rivers and lakes by a selective multi-residue assay based on liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Recoveries in surface water were generally higher than 80%, with overall variability of the method lower than 10%. LODs were generally lower than 0.2ng/L, and LOQs were lower than 0.6ng/L, with few exceptions. Many of the tested substances were found in both rivers and lakes, at concentrations ranging from high pg/L to high ng/L, with loads in rivers in the range of tenths to hundreds of grams per day. Our data indicate that residues of drugs of abuse have become widespread surface water contaminants in populated areas. Since most of these residues still have potent pharmacological activities, their presence in the aquatic environment may have potential implications for human health and wildlife. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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14. Identification and Measurement of Illicit Drugs and Their Metabolites in Urban Wastewater by Liquid Chromatography—Tandem Mass Spectrometry.
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Castiglioni, Sara, Zuccato, Ettore, Crisci, Elisabetta, Chiabrando, Chiara, Fanelli, Roberto, and Bagnati, Renzo
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DRUGS of abuse , *METABOLITES , *INDUSTRIAL wastes , *LIQUID chromatography , *MASS spectrometry , *SOLID phase extraction , *WASTEWATER treatment , *CANNABINOIDS , *ANALYTICAL chemistry - Abstract
Residues of illicit drugs and their metabolites that are excreted by humans may flow into and through wastewater treatment plants. The aim of this study was to develop a method for the determination of cocaine, amphetamines, morphine, cannabinoids, methadone, and some of their metabolites in wastewater. Composite 24-h samples from urban treatment plants were enriched with deuterated internal standards before solid-phase extraction. High-pressure liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry with multiple reaction monitoring was used for quantitation. Recoveries were generally higher than 80%, and limits of quantifications were in the low nanograms-per-liter range for untreated and treated wastewater. The overall variability of the method was lower than 10% for untreated and 5% for treated wastewater. The method was applied to wastewater samples coming from two treatment plants in Italy and Switzerland. Quantification ranges were found to be 0.2-1 µg/L for cocaine and its metabolite benzoylecgonine, 80-200 ng/L for morphine, 10 ng/L for 6-acetylmorphine, 60-90 ng/L for 11-nor-9-carboxy-Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol, 10-90 ng/L for methadone and its main metabolite 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine, and lower than 20 ng/L for amphetamines. As previously reported for cocaine, this method could be useful to estimate and monitor drug consumption in the population in real time, helping social scientists and authorities to combat drug abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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15. Sewage-based Epidemiology Requires a Truly Transdisciplinary Approach.
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Ort, Christoph, Banta-Green, Caleb J., Bijlsma, Lubertus, Castiglioni, Sara, Emke, Erik, Gartner, Coral, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Reid, Malcolm J., Rieckermann, Jörg, and van Nuijs, Alexander L. N.
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EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,PUBLIC health research ,RESEARCH methodology ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineers ,PHARMACOLOGISTS ,ANALYTICAL chemists - Abstract
The article discusses the importance of a transdisciplinary approach for a sewage-based epidemiology (SBE) research. It mentions the importance of collaborative efforts from various experts, including environmental engineers, analytical chemists and pharmacologists, to yield reliable results. An overview of the uncertainties, ethical considerations and outlook of SBE is also provided.
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- 2014
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16. Comparison of pharmaceutical, illicit drug, alcohol, nicotine and caffeine levels in wastewater with sale, seizure and consumption data for 8 European cities.
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Baz-Lomba, Jose Antonio, Salvatore, Stefania, Gracia-Lor, Emma, Bade, Richard, Castiglioni, Sara, Castrignanò, Erika, Causanilles, Ana, Hernandez, Felix, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Kinyua, Juliet, McCall, Ann-Kathrin, van Nuijs, Alexander, Ort, Christoph, Plósz, Benedek G, Ramin, Pedram, Reid, Malcolm, Rousis, Nikolaos I, Ryu, Yeonsuk, de Voogt, Pim, and Bramness, Jorgen
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DRUG analysis ,AMPHETAMINES ,BEVERAGES ,BUSINESS ,CAFFEINE ,COCAINE ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DRUG use testing ,DRUGS ,DRUGS of abuse ,ETHANOL ,RESEARCH methodology ,ECSTASY (Drug) ,MEDICAL cooperation ,METHAMPHETAMINE ,METROPOLITAN areas ,NICOTINE ,POLLUTANTS ,RESEARCH ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TOBACCO ,EVALUATION research ,CENTRAL nervous system stimulants - Abstract
Background: Monitoring the scale of pharmaceuticals, illicit and licit drugs consumption is important to assess the needs of law enforcement and public health, and provides more information about the different trends within different countries. Community drug use patterns are usually described by national surveys, sales and seizure data. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has been shown to be a reliable approach complementing such surveys.Method: This study aims to compare and correlate the consumption estimates of pharmaceuticals, illicit drugs, alcohol, nicotine and caffeine from wastewater analysis and other sources of information. Wastewater samples were collected in 2015 from 8 different European cities over a one week period, representing a population of approximately 5 million people. Published pharmaceutical sale, illicit drug seizure and alcohol, tobacco and caffeine use data were used for the comparison.Results: High agreement was found between wastewater and other data sources for pharmaceuticals and cocaine, whereas amphetamines, alcohol and caffeine showed a moderate correlation. methamphetamine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and nicotine did not correlate with other sources of data. Most of the poor correlations were explained as part of the uncertainties related with the use estimates and were improved with other complementary sources of data.Conclusions: This work confirms the promising future of WBE as a complementary approach to obtain a more accurate picture of substance use situation within different communities. Our findings suggest further improvements to reduce the uncertainties associated with both sources of information in order to make the data more comparable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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17. ILLICIT DRUGS IN THE ENVIRONMENT: EMERGING CONTAMINANTS AND INDICATORS OF DRUG ABUSE.
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Castiglioni, Sara and Zuccato, Ettore
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DRUGS of abuse ,INDUSTRIAL wastes ,ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,SEWAGE ,WATER pollution - Abstract
The article presents some of the results obtained for illicit drugs in several monitoring campaigns conducted in waste and surface water by a research team in Europe. Sewage epidemiology, an application of the measurement of illicit drugs in wastewater, is introduced. They found benzoylecgonine as the most abundant compound in wastewater. In addition, a substantial increase in the concentrations of illicit drugs from the source to the mouth in all the rivers was observed.
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- 2010
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18. Refining correction factors for back-calculation of illicit drug use.
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Gracia-Lor, Emma, Zuccato, Ettore, and Castiglioni, Sara
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DRUGS of abuse , *DRUG abuse , *DRUG utilization , *SEWAGE purification , *AMPHETAMINES - Abstract
The estimation of illicit drugs use through wastewater analysis has become an important issue in the last few years due to their large worldwide consumption, which results in economic, social and health costs. The amounts of urinary biomarkers of illicit drugs (selected drugs or their metabolites) measured in wastewater are used to back-calculate the consumption of a particular drug by the population and to monitor temporal and spatial trends of illicit drug use in a community. The reliability of back-calculation depends on different factors, one being the accuracy of correction factors. A wide range of correction factors have been used in different studies and some biases must be expected when comparing results. Most of the correction factors were developed several years ago, so they need to be updated to include the latest information on pharmacokinetics. Moreover, new comprehensive methods to treat data should be adopted. The goal of this study is to refine current correction factors for back-calculation of the most widely used illicit drugs: amphetamine, methamphetamine, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). The mean percentages of excretion of the parent drugs and their metabolites were calculated for each route of administration, utilizing all accessible pharmacokinetic studies in the literature. This allowed to select the most suitable drug target residue and a refined correction factor was obtained for each substance considering the most frequent route of administration. The refined correction factors we propose can be used in wastewater based epidemiology to standardize the back-calculation of these drugs. These results can be included in the best practice protocol currently adopted in EU studies in order to reduce uncertainty and improve the comparability of results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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19. Realistic mixture of illicit drugs impaired the oxidative status of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha).
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Parolini, Marco, Magni, Stefano, Castiglioni, Sara, Zuccato, Ettore, and Binelli, Andrea
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ZEBRA mussel , *OXIDATIVE stress , *AQUATIC ecology , *DRUGS of abuse , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *DRUG toxicity , *EFFECT of water pollution on aquatic organisms - Abstract
Illicit drugs are considered to be emerging aquatic pollutants since they are commonly found in freshwater ecosystems in the high ng L −1 to low μg L −1 range concentrations. Although the environmental occurrence of the most common psychoactive compounds is well known, recently some investigations showed their potential toxicity toward non-target aquatic organisms. However, to date, these studies completely neglected that organisms in the real environment are exposed to a complex mixture, which could lead to dissimilar adverse effects. The present study investigated the oxidative alterations of the freshwater bivalve Dreissena polymorpha induced by a 14-d exposure to an environmentally relevant mixture of the most common illicit drugs found in the aquatic environment, namely cocaine (50 ng L −1 ), benzoylecgonine (300 ng L −1 ), amphetamine (300 ng L −1 ), morphine (100 ng L −1 ) and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (50 ng L −1 ). The total oxidant status (TOS) was measured to investigate the increase in the reactive oxygen species’ levels, while the activity of antioxidant enzymes and glutathione S-transferase were measured to note the eventual imbalances between pro-oxidant and antioxidant molecules. In addition, oxidative damage was assessed by measuring the levels of lipid peroxidation and protein carbonylation. Significant time-dependent increases of all the antioxidant activities were induced by the mixture. Moreover, the illicit drug mixture significantly increased the levels of carbonylated proteins and caused a slight variation in lipid peroxidation. Our results showed that a mixture of illicit drugs at realistic environmental concentrations can impair the oxidative status of the zebra mussel, posing a serious hazard to the health status of this bivalve species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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20. Comparing illicit drug use in 19 European cities through sewage analysis
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Thomas, Kevin V., Bijlsma, Lubertus, Castiglioni, Sara, Covaci, Adrian, Emke, Erik, Grabic, Roman, Hernández, Félix, Karolak, Sara, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Lindberg, Richard H., Lopez de Alda, Miren, Meierjohann, Axel, Ort, Christoph, Pico, Yolanda, Quintana, José B., Reid, Malcolm, Rieckermann, Jörg, Terzic, Senka, van Nuijs, Alexander L.N., and de Voogt, Pim
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DRUGS of abuse , *BIOMARKERS , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *METHAMPHETAMINE abuse , *DRUG marketing , *PER capita - Abstract
Abstract: The analysis of sewage for urinary biomarkers of illicit drugs is a promising and complementary approach for estimating the use of these substances in the general population. For the first time, this approach was simultaneously applied in 19 European cities, making it possible to directly compare illicit drug loads in Europe over a 1-week period. An inter-laboratory comparison study was performed to evaluate the analytical performance of the participating laboratories. Raw 24-hour composite sewage samples were collected from 19 European cities during a single week in March 2011 and analyzed for the urinary biomarkers of cocaine, amphetamine, ecstasy, methamphetamine and cannabis using in-house optimized and validated analytical methods. The load of each substance used in each city was back-calculated from the measured concentrations. The data show distinct temporal and spatial patterns in drug use across Europe. Cocaine use was higher in Western and Central Europe and lower in Northern and Eastern Europe. The extrapolated total daily use of cocaine in Europe during the study period was equivalent to 356kg/day. High per capita ecstasy loads were observed in Dutch cities, as well as in Antwerp and London. In general, cocaine and ecstasy loads were significantly elevated during the weekend compared to weekdays. Per-capita loads of methamphetamine were highest in Helsinki and Turku, Oslo and Budweis, while the per capita loads of cannabis were similar throughout Europe. This study shows that a standardized analysis for illicit drug urinary biomarkers in sewage can be applied to estimate and compare the use of these substances at local and international scales. This approach has the potential to deliver important information on drug markets (supply indicator). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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21. Simultaneous determination of new psychoactive substances and illicit drugs in sewage: Potential of micro-liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry in wastewater-based epidemiology.
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Celma, Alberto, Sancho, Juan V., Salgueiro-González, Noelia, Castiglioni, Sara, Zuccato, Ettore, Hernández, Félix, and Bijlsma, Lubertus
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TANDEM mass spectrometry , *DRUGS of abuse , *MASS spectrometry , *SEWAGE , *CHROMATOGRAPHIC analysis , *CAPILLARY liquid chromatography - Abstract
• Simultaneous monitoring of 5 illicit drugs and 17 NPS in wastewater. • Low sample and organic solvent volumes used resulted in a greener methodology. • Micro-LC was extensively evaluated in terms of sensitivity and reproducibility. • Micro-LC has shown a strong potential for wastewater-based epidemiology application. • Dipentylone has been found for the first time in wastewater. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) can give valuable light on the extent and actual use of new psychoactive substances (NPS). In this work, a fully validated methodology for the simultaneous determination of illicit drugs and NPS in wastewater by solid-phase extraction followed by UHPLC-MS/MS has been developed. The small sample volume (5 mL) required for analysis is of high interest, especially when performing large sampling campaigns involving many locations of different geographical origin, as it has been performed in the past. The method was applied to wastewater samples from different European locations and permitted the simultaneous monitoring of conventional drugs and NPS. Cocaine, amphetamine, MDMA, methamphetamine and ketamine were found in all wastewater samples, and several NPS (dipentylone, butylone, mephedrone, methedrone and methylone) were observed in some of the samples monitored. It is noteworthy that dipentylone was detected in wastewater for the very first time. Furthermore, a detailed comparison of micro liquid chromatography (μLC) and UHPLC, both coupled to tandem mass spectrometry, in terms of sensitivity and reproducibility has been made for the first time in the application field of WBE. An average increase factor of 14 (mass normalized data) was observed in sensitivity for μLC-MS/MS. The overall method performance was also compared (un-normalized data), and an average increase sensitivity factor of 4.5 was observed for μLC-MS/MS. However, large deviations in retention time (up to 0.4 min) affected the reproducibility and robustness of the μLC-MS/MS method when it was applied to wastewater analysis. Although in this work μLC-MS/MS was strongly influenced by the amount of matrix loaded in the separation device, its enhanced sensitivity and promotion of green chemistry (faster analysis time and less solvent consumption) allow to expect improved future applications, especially when analytes are present at very low concentrations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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22. Multi-year inter-laboratory exercises for the analysis of illicit drugs and metabolites in wastewater: Development of a quality control system.
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van Nuijs, Alexander L.N., Lai, Foon Yin, Been, Frederic, Andres-Costa, Maria Jesus, Barron, Leon, Baz-Lomba, Jose Antonio, Berset, Jean-Daniel, Benaglia, Lisa, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Burgard, Dan, Castiglioni, Sara, Christophoridis, Christophoros, Covaci, Adrian, de Voogt, Pim, Emke, Erik, Fatta-Kassinos, Despo, Fick, Jerker, Hernandez, Felix, Gerber, Cobus, and González-Mariño, Iria
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WASTEWATER treatment , *DRUGS of abuse , *METABOLITE analysis , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Thirty-seven laboratories from 25 countries present the development of an inter-laboratory testing scheme for the analysis of seven illicit drug residues in standard solutions, tap- and wastewater. Almost 10 000 concentration values were evaluated: triplicates of up to five samples and 26 laboratories per year. The setup was substantially improved with experiences gained across the six repetitions (e.g. matrix type, sample conditions, spiking levels). From this, (pre-)analytical issues (e.g. pH adjustment, filtration) were revealed for specific analytes which resulted in formulation of best-practice protocols for inter-laboratory setup and analytical procedures. The results illustrate the effectiveness of the inter-laboratory setup to assess laboratory performance in the framework of wastewater-based epidemiology. The exercise proved that measurements of laboratories were of high quality (>80% satisfactory results for six out of seven analytes) and that analytical follow-up is important to assist laboratories in improving robustness of wastewater-based epidemiology results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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23. Enantiomeric profiling of chiral illicit drugs in a pan-European study.
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Castrignanò, Erika, Yang, Zhugen, Bade, Richard, Baz-Lomba, Jose A., Castiglioni, Sara, Causanilles, Ana, Covaci, Adrian, Gracia-Lor, Emma, Hernandez, Felix, Kinyua, Juliet, McCall, Ann-Kathrin, van Nuijs, Alexander L.N., Ort, Christoph, Plósz, Benedek G., Ramin, Pedram, Rousis, Nikolaos I., Ryu, Yeonsuk, Thomas, Kevin V., de Voogt, Pim, and Zuccato, Ettore
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ENANTIOMERS , *CHIRAL drugs , *DRUGS of abuse , *AMPHETAMINES , *WASTEWATER treatment , *ECSTASY (Drug) - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present the first study on spatial and temporal variation in the enantiomeric profile of chiral drugs in eight European cities. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) and enantioselective analysis were combined to evaluate trends in illicit drug use in the context of their consumption vs direct disposal as well as their synthetic production routes. Spatial variations in amphetamine loads were observed with higher use in Northern European cities. Enantioselective analysis showed a general enrichment of amphetamine with the R -(−)-enantiomer in wastewater indicating its abuse. High loads of racemic methamphetamine were detected in Oslo (EF = 0.49 ± 0.02). This is in contrast to other European cities where S -(+)-methamphetamine was the predominant enantiomer. This indicates different methods of methamphetamine synthesis and/or trafficking routes in Oslo, compared with the other cities tested. An enrichment of MDMA with the R -(−)-enantiomer was observed in European wastewaters indicating MDMA consumption rather than disposal of unused drug. MDA's chiral signature indicated its enrichment with the S -(+)-enantiomer, which confirms its origin from MDMA metabolism in humans. HMMA was also detected at quantifiable concentrations in wastewater and was found to be a suitable biomarker for MDMA consumption. Mephedrone was only detected in wastewater from the United Kingdom with population-normalised loads up to 47.7 mg 1000 people −1 day −1 . The enrichment of mephedrone in the R -(+)-enantiomer in wastewater suggests stereoselective metabolism in humans, hence consumption, rather than direct disposal of the drug. The investigation of drug precursors, such as ephedrine, showed that their presence was reasonably ascribed to their medical use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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24. Illicit drug consumption in school populations measured by wastewater analysis.
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Zuccato, Ettore, Gracia-Lor, Emma, Rousis, Nikolaos I., Parabiaghi, Alberto, Senta, Ivan, Riva, Francesco, and Castiglioni, Sara
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DRUG abuse , *HEALTH of school children , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *MORPHINE abuse , *HYDROCARBON analysis , *AMPHETAMINES , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *COCAINE , *DRUG use testing , *DRUGS of abuse , *HYDROCARBONS , *KETAMINE , *MASS spectrometry , *ECSTASY (Drug) , *METHAMPHETAMINE , *SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Background: Analysis of student consumption of illicit drugs (ID) by school population surveys (SPS) provides information useful for prevention, but the results may be influenced by subjective factors. We explored wastewater (WW) analysis to improve the information.Methods: We used WW analysis to measure ID consumption in eight secondary schools in Italy in 2010-13 (students aged 15-19). Samples were collected from the sewage pipes of the schools during lessons for one week each year. Samples were analysed by mass spectrometry to measure ID and consumption by students was compared to that of the general population.Results: We found THCCOOH (human metabolite of THC) concentrations in 2010 indicating significant consumption of cannabis in all the schools and benzoylecgonine (human metabolite of cocaine) suggesting a limited consumption of cocaine in all but one school. Morphine was only found in traces, and amphetamine, methamphetamine, ecstasy, ketamine and mephedrone were not detectable. Repeated analysis showed cannabis stable until 2012 with increases in 2013, low cocaine and morphine levels, and none of the other ID.Discussion: WW analysis suggested that students used amounts of cannabis comparable to the general population, with low, sporadic use of cocaine and opioids, but excluded the use of significant amounts of amphetamine, methamphetamine, ecstasy, ketamine and mephedrone. WW analysis was useful to confirm SPS figures and provides complementary findings for effective prevention strategies. This is the first time WW analysis has been used to investigate consumption of a large number of ID and new psychoactive substances (NPS) in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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25. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry determination of synthetic cathinones and phenethylamines in influent wastewater of eight European cities.
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Bade, Richard, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Sancho, Juan V., Baz-Lomba, Jose A., Castiglioni, Sara, Castrignanò, Erika, Causanilles, Ana, Gracia-Lor, Emma, Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, Kinyua, Juliet, McCall, Ann-Kathrin, van Nuijs, Alexander L.N., Ort, Christoph, Plósz, Benedek G., Ramin, Pedram, Rousis, Nikolaos I., Ryu, Yeonsuk, Thomas, Kevin V., de Voogt, Pim, and Zuccato, Ettore
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LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *PSYCHOTROPIC plants , *DRUGS of abuse , *WASTEWATER treatment , *SOLID phase extraction - Abstract
The popularity of new psychoactive substances (NPS) has grown in recent years, with certain NPS commonly and preferentially consumed even following the introduction of preventative legislation. With the objective to improve the knowledge on the use of NPS, a rapid and very sensitive method was developed for the determination of ten priority NPS (N-ethylcathinone, methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV), methylone, butylone, methedrone, mephedrone, naphyrone, 25-C-NBOMe, 25-I-NBOMe and 25-B-NBOMe) in influent wastewater. Sample clean-up and pre-concentration was made by off-line solid phase extraction (SPE) with Oasis MCX cartridges. Isotopically labelled internal standards were used to correct for matrix effects and potential SPE losses. Following chromatographic separation on a C 18 column within 6 min, the compounds were measured by tandem mass spectrometry in positive ionization mode. The method was optimised and validated for all compounds. Limits of quantification were evaluated by spiking influent wastewater samples at 1 or 5 ng/L. An investigation into the stability of these compounds in influent wastewater was also performed, showing that, following acidification at pH 2, all compounds were relatively stable for up to 7 days. The method was then applied to influent wastewater samples from eight European countries, in which mephedrone, methylone and MDPV were detected. This work reveals that although NPS use is not as extensive as for classic illicit drugs, the application of a highly sensitive analytical procedure makes their detection in wastewater possible. The developed analytical methodology forms the basis of a subsequent model-based back-calculation of abuse rate in urban areas ( i.e. wastewater-based epidemiology). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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26. Refining the estimation of amphetamine consumption by wastewater-based epidemiology.
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Gao, Jianfa, Burgard, Daniel A., Tscharke, Benjamin J., Lai, Foon Yin, O'Brien, Jake W., Nguyen, Hien D., Zheng, Qiuda, Li, Jiaying, Du, Peng, Li, Xiqing, Wang, Degao, Castiglioni, Sara, Cruz-Cruz, Copytzy, Baz-Lomba, Jose Antonio, Yargeau, Viviane, Emke, Erik, Thomas, Kevin V., Mueller, Jochen F., and Thai, Phong K.
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AMPHETAMINES , *METHAMPHETAMINE , *DRUGS of abuse , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
• Amphetamine & methamphetamine mass loads from more than 10,000 wastewater samples analyzed. • Amphetamine/Methamphetamine ratios were consistent where methamphetamine use was predominant. • Subtraction of amphetamine from methamphetamine is critical for catchments with comparable consumption of the two substances. • High level of legal amphetamine consumption found in some regions. Consumption of amphetamine and methamphetamine, two common illicit drugs, has been monitored by wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) in many countries over the past decade. There is potential for the estimated amount of amphetamine used to be skewed at locations where methamphetamine is also consumed, because amphetamine is also excreted to wastewater following methamphetamine consumption. The present study aims to review the available data in the literature to identify an average ratio of amphetamine/methamphetamine (AMP/METH) that is excreted to wastewater after methamphetamine consumption. This ratio could then be used to refine the estimation of amphetamine consumption in catchments where there is both amphetamine and methamphetamine use. Using data from more than 6000 wastewater samples from Australia where methamphetamine is the dominant illicit amphetamine-type substance on the market, we were able to subtract the contribution of legal sources of amphetamine contribution and obtain the median AMP/METH ratio in wastewater of 0.09. Using this value, the amphetamine derived from methamphetamine consumption can be calculated and subtracted from the total amphetamine mass loads in wastewater samples. Without considering the contribution of amphetamine from methamphetamine use, selected European catchments with comparable consumption of amphetamine and methamphetamine showed up to 83% overestimation of amphetamine use. For catchments with AMP/METH ratio greater than 1.00, the impact of amphetamine from methamphetamine would be negligible; for catchments with AMP/METH ratio in the range of 0.04-0.19, it will be difficult to accurately estimate amphetamine consumption. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. Assessing geographical differences in illicit drug consumption--A comparison of results from epidemiological and wastewater data in Germany and Switzerland.
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Been, Frederic, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Benaglia, Lisa, Berset, Jean-Daniel, Botero-Coy, Ana M., Castiglioni, Sara, Kraus, Ludwig, Zobel, Frank, Schaub, Michael P., Bücheli, Alexander, Hernández, Félix, Delémont, Olivier, Esseiva, Pierre, and Ort, Christoph
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GEODIVERSITY , *DRUGS of abuse , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *INDUSTRIAL wastes , *CRIME statistics , *DRUG utilization statistics , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DRUG use testing , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Wastewater analysis is an innovative approach that allows monitoring illicit drug use at the community level. This study focused on investigating geographical differences in drug consumption by comparing epidemiological, crime and wastewater data.Methods: Wastewater samples were collected in 19 cities across Germany and Switzerland during one week, covering a population of approximately 8.1 million people. Self-report data and consumption offences for the investigated areas were used for comparison and to investigate differences between the indicators.Results: Good agreement between data sources was observed for cannabis and amphetamine-type stimulants, whereas substantial discrepancies were observed for cocaine. In Germany, an important distinction could be made between Berlin, Dortmund and Munich, where cocaine and particularly amphetamine were more prevalent, and Dresden, where methamphetamine consumption was clearly predominant. Cocaine consumption was relatively homogenous in the larger urban areas of Switzerland, although prevalence and offences data suggested a more heterogeneous picture. Conversely, marked regional differences in amphetamine and methamphetamine consumption could be highlighted.Conclusions: Combining the available data allowed for a better understanding of the geographical differences regarding prevalence, typology and amounts of substances consumed. For cannabis and amphetamine-type stimulants, the complementarity of survey, police and wastewater data could be highlighted, although notable differences could be identified when considering more stigmatised drugs (i.e. cocaine and heroin). Understanding illicit drug consumption at the national scale remains a difficult task, yet this research illustrates the added value of combining complementary data sources to obtain a more comprehensive and accurate picture of the situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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28. Alcohol and cocaine co-consumption in two European cities assessed by wastewater analysis.
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Rodríguez-Álvarez, Tania, Racamonde, Inés, González-Mariño, Iria, Borsotti, Andrea, Rodil, Rosario, Rodríguez, Isaac, Zuccato, Ettore, Quintana, José Benito, and Castiglioni, Sara
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ALCOHOL , *COCAINE , *SEWAGE , *BIOMARKERS , *DRUGS of abuse - Abstract
The quantitative determination of urinary biomarkers in raw wastewater has emerged in recent years as a promising tool for estimating the consumption of illicit drugs, tobacco and alcohol in a population and for comparing local and temporal trends. In this study, a three-year monitoring campaign (2012–2014) was conducted to compare alcohol and cocaine use in two European cities (Santiago de Compostela, Spain, and Milan, Italy) by wastewater analysis. Ethyl sulphate and benzoylecgonine were used, respectively, as biomarkers of ethanol and cocaine consumption and cocaethylene as an indicator of co-consumption of both substances. Biomarkers were measured using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry and concentrations were converted to rates of consumption using specific correction factors. Results were statistically compared in terms of geographic and temporal tendencies. Alcohol intake was significantly higher in Santiago than in Milan (13.6 L versus 5.1 L ethanol/1000 people day, averages). Cocaine use was higher in Milan than in Santiago de Compostela (800 versus 632 mg/1000 people day, averages). A significant higher consumption of both alcohol and cocaine was observed during the weekends (~ 23–75% more than on weekdays) in both cities. In terms of years, slight changes were observed, but no clear trends as representative of the whole year could be identified because of the limited number of days sampled. Co-consumption was evaluated using the cocaethylene/benzoylecgonine ratio, which was higher during the weekend in both cities (58% in Santiago and 47% in Milan over the non-weekend day means), indicating a greater co-consumption when cocaine is used as a recreational drug. Wastewater-based epidemiology gave estimates of alcohol and cocaine use in agreement with previous wastewater studies and with recent European surveillance and prevalence data, and weekly profiles of use and preferential patterns of consumption could be plot. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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29. The biofiltration process by the bivalve D. polymorpha for the removal of some pharmaceuticals and drugs of abuse from civil wastewaters.
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Binelli, Andrea, Magni, Stefano, Soave, Carlo, Marazzi, Francesca, Zuccato, Ettore, Castiglioni, Sara, Parolini, Marco, and Mezzanotte, Valeria
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BIOFILTRATION , *DRUGS of abuse , *ZEBRA mussel , *BIOACCUMULATION , *WASTEWATER treatment - Abstract
This study shows the evaluation of the possible use of the freshwater bivalve Dreissena polymorpha for the removal of some recalcitrant contaminants, namely many pharmaceuticals and drugs of abuse that are not sufficiently removed from civil wastewaters . This mollusk has an enormous filtering capability and is highly resistant to natural and anthropogenic stresses and to a significant bioaccumulation of lipophilic contaminants. All these characteristics may be particularly useful for the removal of compounds not easily eliminated by conventional wastewater treatment processes. To verify this hypothesis an experimental study was conducted at the pilot scale using a pilot plant installed in the largest wastewater treatment plant of Milan (Milano-Nosedo, Italy). First, we presented results obtained in several preliminary tests in order to evaluate the capability of zebra mussel specimens to survive in different wastewater mixtures, its filtering capacity and the possible influence of bio- and photo-degradation in the abatement of the molecules of interest. Finally, data obtained in the final tests demonstrated a capacity of this filter-feeder to reduce the concentrations of several pharmaceuticals and drugs of abuse higher than that obtained by the simple natural sedimentation, suggesting a possible implementation of the bio-filtration process in wastewater management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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30. Corrigendum to “Assessing geographical differences in illicit drug consumption—A comparison of results from epidemiological and wastewater data in Germany and Switzerland” [Drug Alcohol Depend. 161 (2016) 189–199].
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Been, Frederic, Bijlsma, Lubertus, Benaglia, Lisa, Berset, Jean-Daniel, Botero-Coy, Ana M., Castiglioni, Sara, Kraus, Ludwig, Zobel, Frank, Schaub, Michael P., Bücheli, Alexander, Hernández, Félix, Delémont, Olivier, Esseiva, Pierre, and Ort, Christoph
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DRUGS of abuse , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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