Abstract

Polio and enterovirus surveillance may include a number of approaches, including incidence-based observation, a sentinel physician system, environmental monitoring and acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance. The relative value of these methods is widely debated. Here we summarized the results of 14 years of environmental surveillance at four sewage treatment plants of various capacities in Moscow, Russia. A total of 5450 samples were screened, yielding 1089 (20.0%) positive samples. There were 1168 viruses isolated including types 1–3 polioviruses (43%) and 29 different types of non-polio enteroviruses (51%). Despite using the same methodology, a significant variation in detection rates was observed between the treatment plants and within the same facility over time. The number of poliovirus isolates obtained from sewage was roughly 60 times higher than from AFP surveillance over the same time frame. All except one poliovirus isolate were Sabin-like polioviruses. The one isolate was vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 with 17.6% difference from the corresponding Sabin strain, suggesting long-term circulation outside the scope of the surveillance. For some non-polio enterovirus types (e.g., Echovirus 6) there was a good correlation between detection in sewage and incidence of clinical cases in a given year, while other types (e.g., Echovirus 30) could cause large outbreaks and be almost absent in sewage samples. Therefore, sewage monitoring can be an important part of enterovirus surveillance, but cannot substitute other approaches.

Highlights

  • Human enteroviruses are small non-enveloped RNA viruses, which belong to species enterovirusA, B, C, and D and include viruses historically designated as coxsackieviruses A (CVA), coxsackieviruses B (CVB), and echoviruses (E)

  • Within 14 years, 5450 sewage samples were collected at all four treatment plants (TP), and 1089 samples (20.0%)

  • The total proportion of positive samples ranged from 8.9% in 2016 to 26.6% in 2012

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Summary

Introduction

Human enteroviruses are small non-enveloped RNA viruses, which belong to species enterovirus. Polioviruses types 1–3 belong to the enterovirus C species. Enteroviruses (EVs) are ubiquitous and are spread via fecal–oral. Viruses 2019, 11, 424 or aerosol routes, and in the vast majority of infected people, the infection is asymptomatic. A small fraction of infected individuals have clinical manifestations, which range from mild intestinal or catarrhal symptoms to severe lesions of the nervous system, such as meningitis, encephalitis, and poliomyelitis. EVs are regularly excreted into the environment with human feces and contaminate wastewater and other objects. Monitoring of EVs in wastewater provides data on the EV circulation in the population, including asymptomatic infections

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