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Stability of Colistin and Carbapenems in Water and Wastewater

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 14:06 authored by Elipsha Sharma, Celine Kelso, Shuxin Zhang, Ying Guo, Muttucumaru Sivakumar, Guangming Jiang
This study identified the stability of two categories of last-resort antibiotics: colistin (colistins A and B) and carbapenems (meropenem, doripenem, biapenem, and ertapenem) in water and wastewater. Colistin and carbapenems at −20 °C showed a considerable degradation over 3 weeks, with the highest decay noted for ertapenem. Under an acidic pH, all carbapenems showed a comparable level of decay in both water and wastewater. However, under neutral pH, the degradation under wastewater (kww = 0-0.0117 h-1) was higher than in water (kw = 0-0.0042 h-1). For colistin at pH 7, degradation observed in wastewater within 24 h was significantly higher than that in water, with an observed kww of 0.44 h-1 (pH 7, 25 °C) in comparison to a kw of 0.0128 h-1. Temperature deteriorated the stability of colistin in wastewater at pH 7, as the degradation at 4 °C (40-50%) was much lower than that at 25 °C (80-90%). The stability of colistin A and B was identical in both water and wastewater under acidic conditions (pH 5) irrespective of the temperature, with an observed degradation of less than 10%. These results shed light on the environmental stability of last-resort antimicrobials for wastewater-based epidemiology and other related applications.

Funding

Australian Research Council (DP190100385)

History

Journal title

ACS ES and T Water

Language

English

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