Digitalisation

Improved epidemic monitoring via sewage

Analyzing wastewater has the potential to alert authorities about thousands of health threats at once, from antimicrobial resistance to cholera, according to new research from several European universities.

DNA from human feces only accounts for about a fifth of the DNA in wastewater, so there is a lot of disturbing “background DNA" when researchers want to measure disease-causing microbes and their genes from people living in the wastewater treatment plant's coverage area. Model picture: Colourbox.

Hidden within the pipes leading to the Avedøre Wastewater Treatment Plant are some bacteria that the researchers did not expect to find in Danish wastewater: cholera bacteria. Although the amounts were very small, it was a big surprise for the researchers as they investigated the bacteria in wastewater treatment plants across five major European cities, including the three large plants in Copenhagen: Avedøre Wastewater Treatment Plant, Lynetten Wastewater Treatment Plant, and Damhusåen Wastewater Treatment Plant.

One can imagine that the bacteria were brought to the Avedøre plant’s local area by a person from a part of the world where many people carry cholera bacteria in their bodies without necessarily being ill. This individual had the bacteria in their body and contributed faeces to the sewage system, after which the bacteria settled in the pipes near the treatment plant and began replicating there. The researchers have observed that the bacteria have remained near the facility week after week but cannot be found further upstream. Therefore, they suggest that the bacteria are not continuously coming from people who are currently ill but are residing in the biofilm on the pipes. There have been no recorded cases of cholera in Denmark for 150 years, and the detected bacteria can cause serious infections, but not the disease cholera, which is characterised by severe, potentially fatal diarrhoea. However, higher temperatures could affect the geographic spread of potentially dangerous microbes.

The new method of the study can detect where certain bacteria originate from, and although the DNA of the bacteria in the three Copenhagen plants is almost identical, there are still small differences that give each plant its own unique signature. 

The presence of cholera bacteria near by the Avedøre facility is described in a separate scientific article, which also stems from the present research and was published in the journal Microbial Ecology.

Software arranges vast datasets into mysterious groupings

Over a three-year period, from January 2019 to November 2021, 278 wastewater samples were taken from the inlet of the seven wastewater plants and sent to DTU. The researchers then analyzed billions of DNA sequences from the samples, assembling them into genomes from thousands of bacterial species, 1,334 of which were previously unknown. 

The data was analyzed using software developed by the project’s Italian partner at the University of Bologna. This program identifies species that behave similarly over time and groups them.

"In the analyses, we could see that the bacteria in the wastewater clustered into very distinct groups. We began to wonder why and how the groups were formed. Initially, we thought the clusters might represent microbes collaborating with each other, but that was a dead end. Then, we investigated whether some of the groups might consist of bacteria from human feces, and that’s when we hit the mark," says Patrick Munk.

Other groups turned out to be bacteria from the environment, and one group present in all the countries' treatment plants likely comes from biofilms growing on the pipes leading to the facilities.

Once the researchers identified some of the groups using the analysis software, the task became easier.

"The principle is quite simple – certain bacteria always come from humans, and the bacteria that follow their sequences in the analysis likely come from humans as well. In this way, we can identify groups of species that follow each other over time," says Patrick Munk.


All living organisms have genetic material (a genome) made of DNA. Wastewater and other samples contain many different species of microbes, including bacteria and viruses. When you extract the mixed DNA from these species, you don’t just have one genome, but a metagenome. If each species’ genome is like a jigsaw puzzle, then the metagenome is like a whole bunch of mixed-up jigsaw puzzles. Metagenomes can answer questions about which organisms were present and how common they were, making them a valuable tool for monitoring disease-causing bacteria and the genes that make them resistant to antibiotics. From each sample millions of DNA fragments are read, and a lot of samples can be analyzed by a supercomputer.

New method significantly improves success rate

The researchers have previously analyzed metagenomes but not as effectively as with the new method.

"In this new study, we identified 1,334 previously unknown bacterial species in the wastewater. Typically, when analyzing a metagenome consisting of 100 million small pieces of DNA, we could only identify the origins of about 10% of the DNA. However, in this new study, we’ve increased that to nearly 70% of the DNA assigned to the species from which we recovered a genome," says Patrick Munk.

The ability to detect new bacteria is essential, as these bacteria may carry previously unknown antimicrobial resistance genes, and this method could potentially reveal new sources of antimicrobial resistance.

This is an observational study where the researchers worked with data based on the bacteria that were present in the samples from the untreated wastewater, but they did not themselves adjust any variables that can affect the frequency of specific bacteria. This introduces some uncertainty, and even though many human-associated bacteria cluster together, it doesn’t always happen. The next step is to create a synthetic dataset where the researchers know which bacterial species are present and actively change the conditions to observe the outcomes.

"We don’t have a final success rate for this method yet, but it’s clear that we’re onto something significant. We need to optimize the method further to improve its accuracy," says Patrick Munk. 


Original title: Time-series sewage metagenomics distinguishes seasonal, human-derived and environmental microbial communities potentially allowing source-attributed surveillance 

The study was supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and the EU's Horizon 2020 grant VEO.

In many ways, the study continues and builds on previous work where researchers from the DTU National Food Institute led metagenomic wastewater surveillance in over 100 countries, also published in Nature Communications:

Genomic analysis of sewage from 101 countries reveals global landscape of antimicrobial resistance

Global monitoring of antimicrobial resistance based on metagenomics analyses of urban sewage

Read more

Get more information about the The Research Group for Genomic Epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance

Read about EU-WISH, which is led by the Statens Serum Institut and aims to further develop wastewater surveillance to be used for tracking diseases across Europe.