Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the most significant global health threats. Inappropriate and over-usage of antimicrobial agents (AAs) is a major driver for AMR. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) is a promising tool for monitoring AA usage in communities which is, for the first time, explored in this large scale, longitudinal study. Two contrasting urban catchment areas have been investigated: one city and one small town in the Southwest of the UK over a 13-month period in 2018–2019. Per capita daily intake of 17 AAs and metabolites has been estimated and obtained estimates were triangulated with catchment specific AA prescription data to understand AA usage patterns (both seasons driven prescription and AA prescription compliance). Results have demonstrated positive correlations for all quantifiable parent AAs and metabolites in wastewater, and spatial variability in AA usage was observed even in neighbouring urban areas. WBE and catchment specific prescription data showed similar seasonal trends but with low correlation in intake. The reasons might be variable prescribing patterns, prescription/intake outside the studied catchment, and/or lack of patient compliance. WBE proved useful in differentiating between consumption vs topical usage and/or direct disposal of unused AA. WBE is considered superior to prescription data as it provides information on AAs prescribed outside of the monitoring catchment, e.g. HIV antivirals and TB drugs. However, data triangulation, of both prescription data and wastewater data, provides the most comprehensive approach to understanding AA usage in communities.

Full Text
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