Illicit Drugs as Emerging Contaminants

被引:0
|
作者
Castiglioni, Sara [1 ]
Zuccato, Ettore [1 ]
机构
[1] Mario Negri Inst Pharmacol Res, Dept Environm Hlth Sci, I-20156 Milan, Italy
关键词
SOLID-PHASE EXTRACTION; PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS; URBAN WASTE-WATER; SURFACE-WATER; STIMULATORY DRUGS; MASS-SPECTROMETRY; ABUSE; COCAINE; METABOLITES; PHARMACEUTICALS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
O65 [分析化学];
学科分类号
070302 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Illicit drugs were recently indicated as emerging contaminants since they have been detected in waste, surface and drinking water and in the airborne particulates in several European countries and USA. In analogy with pharmaceuticals, the main source of contamination for illicit drugs is human consumption. The residues of drugs of abuse persisting in consumers' urine can reach sewage treatment plants (STPs) in detectable amounts, escaping degradation, and can be released into surface water. The first investigations of illicit drugs in the environment were carried out in U.S.A. in 2004 for amphetamines, and in Italy in 2005 for cocaine and its main urinary metabolite (benzoylecgonine, BE). Several other substances were later measured in water and air, including cannabinoids, cocaine and its metabolites, opioids, amphetamines, ephedrine, ketamine, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), and some related opioid pharmaceuticals. The first step to measure illicit drugs in the environment consists in the preconcentration of analytes operated mainly by solid phase extraction (SPE). Considering the complexity of the environmental matrices and the low concentrations of the analytes, mass spectrometry is the most powerful technique to detect illicit drugs simultaneously with high specificity and accuracy. Therefore, the technique used most frequently is high-pressure liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS-MS). Illicit drugs were frequently detected at concentrations up to the mu g/L range in STP influents (untreated wastewater) in Europe and U.S.A. Cocaine and its major metabolite BE were investigated in the largest number of countries (Spain, Italy, Switzerland, UK, Belgium, Germany, Ireland and U.S.A.), and were the most abundant compounds. Other substances measured at high concentrations were several stimulatory drugs, including amphetamines and ephedrine, opioids, and the main metabolite of cannabis, 11-nor-9-carboxy- Delta 9-THC (THC-COOH). Despite the fact that illicit drugs are generally well removed in STPs (removal higher than 60%), several substances were still detected at concentrations up to the hundreds of ng/L in STPs effluents. Treated wastewater is generally discharged into surface water (rivers, lakes, sea) or undergoes further treatment to produce drinking water. Substantial amounts of illicit drugs therefore direclty enter surface water or drinking water treatment plants. These substances were still detectable in rivers and lakes up to tenths of ng/L in several countries, and trace amounts of BE, methadone and its main metabolite, 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (EDDP), were still present in finished drinking water in a Spanish drinking water treatment plant. Traces of illicit drugs were also detected in airborne particulate in several of the world's cities, indicating the possible distribution of these substances in the air compartment, despite their polarity and high water solubility. The amounts of illicit drugs detected in wastewater could roughly reflect the amounts consumed. Our group recently proposed a novel approach (sewage epidemiology) for estimating drug consumption in a community by the direct measurement of the residues of the illicit drugs in urban wastewater. This method can give evidence-based estimates of drug use in a defined area with the unique ability to monitor local consumption in real time and promptly identify changes.
引用
收藏
页码:119 / 136
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Illicit drugs, a novel group of environmental contaminants
    Zuccato, Ettore
    Castiglioni, Sara
    Bagnati, Renzo
    Chiabrando, Chiara
    Grassi, Paola
    Fanelli, Roberto
    [J]. WATER RESEARCH, 2008, 42 (4-5) : 961 - 968
  • [2] Illicit Drugs: Contaminants in the Environment and Utility in Forensic Epidemiology
    Daughton, Christian G.
    [J]. REVIEWS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY, VOL 210, 2011, 210 : 59 - 110
  • [3] The Emerging Drugs Network of Australia: A toxicosurveillance system of illicit and emerging drugs in the emergency department
    Smith, Jennifer L.
    Soderstrom, Jessamine
    Dawson, Andrew
    Alfred, Sam
    Greene, Shaun
    Isoardi, Katherine
    McCutcheon, David
    Oosthuizen, Francois
    Ezard, Nadine
    Burcham, Jonathon
    Fatovich, Daniel M.
    [J]. EMERGENCY MEDICINE AUSTRALASIA, 2022, 34 (01) : 58 - 64
  • [4] Microbial degradation of nootropic drugs - newgroup of emerging contaminants
    Wozniak, Marta
    Chrzanowski, Lukasz
    Cvancarova, Monika
    Corvini, Philippe F. -X.
    Cichocka, Danuta
    [J]. NEW BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 33 : S32 - S32
  • [5] Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs as Emerging Contaminants
    Tyumina, E. A.
    Bazhutin, G. A.
    Gomez, A. D. P. Cartagena
    Ivshina, I. B.
    [J]. MICROBIOLOGY, 2020, 89 (02) : 148 - 163
  • [6] Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs as Emerging Contaminants
    E. A. Tyumina
    G. A. Bazhutin
    A. d. P. Cartagena Gómez
    I. B. Ivshina
    [J]. Microbiology, 2020, 89 : 148 - 163
  • [7] Suspect screening of pharmaceuticals, illicit drugs, pesticides, and other emerging contaminants in Argentinean Piaractus mesopotamicus, a fish species used for local consumption and export
    Carrizo, Juan Cruz
    Duy, Sung Vo
    Munoz, Gabriel
    Marconi, Guido
    Ame, Maria Valeria
    Sauve, Sebastien
    [J]. CHEMOSPHERE, 2022, 309
  • [8] Market Analysis of Illicit and Emerging Drugs of Abuse in an Anonymized Internet Network
    Lapoint, J.
    Smith, S. W.
    [J]. CLINICAL TOXICOLOGY, 2012, 50 (04) : 347 - 347
  • [9] Recent trends and emerging strategies for aptasensing technologies for illicit drugs detection
    Soni, Shringika
    Jain, Utkarsh
    Burke, Donald H.
    Chauhan, Nidhi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2022, 910
  • [10] Emerging trends in point-of-care sensors for illicit drugs analysis
    Dagar, Manisha
    Yadav, Sangeeta
    Sai, V. V. R.
    Satija, Jitendra
    Bhatia, Himanshu
    [J]. TALANTA, 2022, 238