Vibrio cholerae and Salmonella Typhi culture-based wastewater or non-sewered sanitation surveillance in a resource-limited region.
Petros ChigwechokhaRuth Lusungu NyirendaDavie DalitsaniRanken Lorvin NamaumboYohanny KazembeTed SmithRochelle H HolmPublished in: Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology (2024)
This experience serves as a catalyst for the development and validation of alternative wastewater surveillance analytical methods that are not dependent solely on RT-PCR. In this field trial conducted in Africa, new data-driven approaches were developed to promote early-level wastewater research and expand analysis options in resource-limited settings. Although culture-based methods are labor-intensive and have some limitations, we suggest initially leveraging the overlap with the locally available medical testing capacity for V. cholerae, whereas S. Typhi with RT-PCR may still be required. Wastewater analysis may be acceptable for V. cholerae and S. Typhi, which have a high degree of clinical case underreporting, fecal shedding, short incubation periods, and clear outbreak trends, predominantly in low- and middle-income countries.