Aaron Cowan’s research while affiliated with University of Ottawa and other places

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Publications (6)


Partitioning of measured endogenous IAV viral signal present in: (A) primary sludge (n = 6); (B) municipal wastewater (n = 12). Means and standard error are displayed. Where the standard deviation is too small, the error bars are not displayed. Each measurement is based on three technical triplicates for each biological replicate.
A comparison of both IAV and SARS-CoV-2 wastewater signals citywide in Ottawa, from samples harvested from the city’s WRRF. It was demonstrated that the detection of IAV in wastewater at the city-level (Feb. 13, 2022) occurred 17 days before the first clinical detection of IAV at any of the city’s hospitals or clinics.
Comparison of both IAV and SARS-CoV-2 wastewater signals at the neighbourhood level (A–neighbourhood #1, B–neighbourhood #2 and C–neighbourhood #3) in Ottawa, for samples harvested from the sewer system. The normalized IAV viral signal differed between neighbourhoods and with the citywide signal when population characteristics differed.
Process flowchart describing: (A) Processing of primary clarified sludge samples to examine the fractionation of influenza A viral signal within the supernatant and solid pellet with and without PEG addition, and (B) Processing of municipal wastewater to examine the fractionation of influenza A viral signal within the supernatant, filtered suspended solids and solid pellet.
Municipal and neighbourhood level wastewater surveillance and subtyping of an influenza virus outbreak
  • Article
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September 2022

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190 Reads

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97 Citations

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Recurrent influenza epidemics and pandemic potential are significant risks to global health. Public health authorities use clinical surveillance to locate and monitor influenza and influenza-like cases and outbreaks to mitigate hospitalizations and deaths. Currently, global integration of clinical surveillance is the only reliable method for reporting influenza types and subtypes to warn of emergent pandemic strains. The utility of wastewater surveillance (WWS) during the COVID-19 pandemic as a less resource intensive replacement or complement for clinical surveillance has been predicated on analyzing viral fragments in wastewater. We show here that influenza virus targets are stable in wastewater and partitions favorably to the solids fraction. By quantifying, typing, and subtyping the virus in municipal wastewater and primary sludge during a community outbreak, we forecasted a citywide flu outbreak with a 17-day lead time and provided population-level viral subtyping in near real-time to show the feasibility of influenza virus WWS at the municipal and neighbourhood levels in near real time using minimal resources and infrastructure.

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Understanding the dynamic relation between wastewater SARS-CoV-2 signal and clinical metrics throughout the pandemic

September 2022

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71 Reads

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37 Citations

The Science of The Total Environment

Wastewater surveillance (WWS) of SARS-CoV-2 was proven to be a reliable and complementary tool for population-wide monitoring of COVID-19 disease incidence but was not as rigorously explored as an indicator for disease burden throughout the pandemic. Prior to global mass immunization campaigns and during the spread of the wildtype COVID-19 and the Alpha variant of concern (VOC), viral measurement of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater was a leading indicator for both COVID-19 incidence and disease burden in communities. As the two-dose vaccination rates escalated during the spread of the Delta VOC in Jul. 2021 through Dec. 2021, relations weakened between wastewater signal and community COVID-19 disease incidence and maintained a strong relationship with clinical metrics indicative of disease burden (new hospital admissions, ICU admissions, and deaths). Further, with the onset of the vaccine-resistant Omicron BA.1 VOC in Dec. 2021 through Mar. 2022, wastewater again became a strong indicator of both disease incidence and burden during a period of limited natural immunization (no recent infection), vaccine escape, and waned vaccine effectiveness. Lastly, with the populations regaining enhanced natural and vaccination immunization shortly prior to the onset of the Omicron BA.2 VOC in mid-Mar 2022, wastewater is shown to be a strong indicator for both disease incidence and burden. Hospitalization-to-wastewater ratio is further shown to be a good indicator of VOC virulence when widespread clinical testing is limited. In the future, WWS is expected to show moderate indication of incidence and strong indication of disease burden in the community during future potential seasonal vaccination campaigns.


Wastewater to clinical case (WC) ratio of COVID-19 identifies insufficient clinical testing, onset of new variants of concern and population immunity in urban communities

September 2022

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171 Reads

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34 Citations

The Science of The Total Environment

Clinical testing has been the cornerstone of public health monitoring and infection control efforts in communities throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. With the anticipated reduction of clinical testing as the disease moves into an endemic state, SARS-CoV-2 wastewater surveillance (WWS) will have greater value as an important diagnostic tool. An in-depth analysis and understanding of the metrics derived from WWS is required to interpret and utilize WWS-acquired data effectively (McClary-Gutierrez et al., 2021; O’Keeffe, 2021). In this study, the SARS-CoV-2 wastewater signal to clinical cases (WC) ratio was investigated across seven cities in Canada over periods ranging from 8 to 21 months. This work demonstrates that significant increases in the WC ratio occurred when clinical testing eligibility was modified to appointment-only testing, identifying a period of insufficient clinical testing (resulting in a reduction to testing access and a reduction in the number of daily tests) in these communities, despite increases in the wastewater signal. Furthermore, the WC ratio decreased significantly in 6 of the 7 studied locations, serving as a potential signal of the emergence of the Alpha variant of concern (VOC) in a relatively non-immunized community (40–60 % allelic proportion), while a more muted decrease in the WC ratio signaled the emergence of the Delta VOC in a relatively well-immunized community (40–60 % allelic proportion). Finally, a significant decrease in the WC ratio signaled the emergence of the Omicron VOC, likely because of the variant's greater effectiveness at evading immunity, leading to a significant number of new reported clinical cases, even when community immunity was high. The WC ratio, used as an additional monitoring metric, could complement clinical case counts and wastewater signals as individual metrics in its potential ability to identify important epidemiological occurrences, adding value to WWS as a diagnostic technology during the COVID-19 pandemic and likely for future pandemics.


Understanding the dynamic relation between wastewater SARS-CoV-2 signal and clinical metrics throughout the pandemic

July 2022

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64 Reads

Wastewater surveillance (WWS) of SARS-CoV-2 was proven to be a reliable and complementary tool for population-wide monitoring of COVID-19 disease incidence but was not as rigorously explored as an indicator for disease burden throughout the pandemic. Prior to global mass immunization campaigns and during the spread of the wildtype COVID-19 and the Alpha variant of concern (VOC), viral measurement of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater was a leading indicator for both COVID-19 incidence and disease burden in communities. As the two-dose vaccination rates escalated during the spread of the Delta VOC in Jul. 2021 through Dec. 2021, relations weakened between wastewater signal and community COVID-19 disease incidence and maintained a strong relationship with clinical metrics indicative of disease burden (new hospital admissions, ICU admissions, and deaths). Further, with the onset of the vaccine-resistant Omicron BA.1 VOC in Dec. 2021 through Mar. 2022, wastewater again became a strong indicator of both disease incidence and burden during a period of limited natural immunization (no recent infection), vaccine escape, and waned vaccine effectiveness. Lastly, with the populations regaining enhanced natural and vaccination immunization shortly prior to the onset of the Omicron BA.2 VOC in mid-Mar 2022, wastewater is shown to be a strong indicator for both disease incidence and burden. Hospitalization-to-wastewater ratio is further shown to be a good indicator of VOC virulence when widespread clinical testing is limited. In the future, WWS is expected to show moderate indication of incidence and strong indication of disease burden in the community during future potential seasonal vaccination campaigns. Highlights Need to elucidate interpretation of CoV-2 WWS for seasonal vaccination campaigns. WWS to incidence relation weakens with peak natural and vaccination immunization. WWS to hospitalization remains strong with natural and vaccination immunization. WWS as indicator of hospitalization during future seasonal vaccination campaigns. WWS/hospitalization as indicator of VOC virulence with limited clinical testing.


Fig. 3 Comparison of1 IAV and SARS-CoV-2 wastewater signals over time at the citywide level
Wastewater surveillance of influenza activity: Early detection, surveillance, and subtyping in city and neighbourhood communities

June 2022

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131 Reads

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2 Citations

Recurrent epidemics of influenza infection and its pandemic potential present a significant risk to global population health. To mitigate hospitalizations and death, local public health relies on clinical surveillance to locate and monitor influenza-like illnesses and/or influenza cases and outbreaks. At an international level, the global integration of clinical surveillance networks is the only reliable method to report influenza types and subtypes and warn of an emergent pandemic strain. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the demonstrated utility of wastewater surveillance (WWS) in complementing or even replacing clinical surveillance, the latter a resource-intensive enterprise, was predicated on the presence of stable viral fragments in wastewater. We show that influenza virus targets are stable in wastewaters and partitions to the solids fraction. We subsequently quantify, type, and subtype influenza virus in municipal wastewater and primary sludge throughout the course of a community outbreak. This research demonstrates the feasibility of applying influenza virus WWS to city and neighbourhood levels; showing a 17-day lead time in forecasting a citywide flu outbreak and providing population-level viral subtyping in near real-time using minimal resources and infrastructure.


Wastewater to clinical case (WC) ratio of COVID-19 identifies insufficient clinical testing, onset of new variants of concern and population immunity in urban communities

April 2022

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148 Reads

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1 Citation

Clinical testing has been the cornerstone of public health monitoring and infection control efforts in communities throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. With the extant and anticipated reduction of clinical testing as the disease moves into an endemic state, SARS-CoV-2 wastewater surveillance (WWS) is likely to have greater value as an important diagnostic tool to inform public health. As the widespread adoption of WWS is relatively new at the scale employed for COVID-19, interpretation of data, including the relationship to clinical cases, has yet to be standardized. An in-depth analysis of the metrics derived from WWS is required for public health units/agencies to interpret and utilize WWS-acquired data effectively and efficiently. In this study, the SARS-CoV-2 wastewater signal to clinical cases (WC) ratio was investigated across seven different cities in Canada over periods ranging from 8 to 21 months. Significant increases in the WC ratio occurred when clinical testing eligibility was modified to appointment-only testing, identifying a period of insufficient clinical testing in these communities. The WC ratio decreased significantly during the emergence of the Alpha variant of concern (VOC) in a relatively non-immunized community’s wastewater (40-60% allelic proportion), while a more muted decrease in the WC ratio signaled the emergence of the Delta VOC in a relatively well-immunized community’s wastewater (40-60% allelic proportion). Finally, a rapid and significant decrease in the WC ratio signaled the emergence of the Omicron VOC, likely because of the variant’s greater effectiveness at evading immunity, leading to a significant number of new reported clinical cases, even when vaccine-induced community immunity was high. The WC ratio, used as an additional monitoring metric, complements clinical case counts and wastewater signals as individual metrics in its ability to identify important epidemiological occurrences, adding value to WWS as a diagnostic technology during the COVID-19 pandemic and likely for future pandemics.

Citations (5)


... As a result, the reflection of temporal trends commonly observed in the dissolved compartment within the SPM fraction may open new perspectives for the field of WBE. While dissolved phase monitoring remains more suitable for the common WBE targets as explored in this study, the growing interest in WBE to track some pathogens such as bacteria, parasites or viruses (Maréchal et al., 2023;Mercier et al., 2022) could benefit from a deeper mining understanding of SPM dynamics and the associated biomarker content. ...

Reference:

Do suspended particles matter for wastewater-based epidemiology?
Municipal and neighbourhood level wastewater surveillance and subtyping of an influenza virus outbreak

... This choice could lead to certain apparent differences but has several advantages. First, previous studies have reported detection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater (e.g., an increase in viral load, or the presence of a new variant) several days ahead of the detection of cases, hospitalizations, or deaths, due to the delay in health outcomes [25][26][27]. Here, infection prevalence is a proxy of respiratory tract shedding, which could precede fecal viral shedding. ...

Understanding the dynamic relation between wastewater SARS-CoV-2 signal and clinical metrics throughout the pandemic
  • Citing Article
  • September 2022

The Science of The Total Environment

... For instance, D' Aoust 91 (2022) highlighted that during periods of restricted clinical testing, such as when testing was limited to appointment-only, the wastewater-to-case ratio significantly increased. This suggested that the true infection rate in the community was higher than what was captured by clinical testing alone, due to reduced testing availability and lower daily test numbers, despite rising viral signals in wastewater 91 . Similarly, Zhu 92 (2022) found a strong correlation between the positive detection rate of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater and reported clinical cases, supporting the notion that wastewater monitoring can serve as a reliable predictive tool, even though directly estimating epidemic size remains challenging 92 . ...

Wastewater to clinical case (WC) ratio of COVID-19 identifies insufficient clinical testing, onset of new variants of concern and population immunity in urban communities

The Science of The Total Environment

... Wolfe et al. [14] established that influenza A virus (IAV) particles in wastewater correlated well with incidence rates from two wellcharacterized outbreaks on U.S. university campuses. Mercier et al. [15] similarly quantified IAV particles in wastewater at the municipality scale in Ottawa, Canada. They established that IAV concentrations in wastewater correlated well with municipal surveillance data when lagged 17 days, meaning wastewater was an early indicator of transmission dynamics in this system. ...

Wastewater surveillance of influenza activity: Early detection, surveillance, and subtyping in city and neighbourhood communities

... With the progression of the COVID-19 pandemic and the predomination of new VOCs such as the B.1.617.2 (Delta) VOC (dominant in Canada from Jul. 2021 to Dec. 2021), B.1.1.529.1 (first Omicron BA.1 sub-lineage dominant in Canada from Dec. 2021 to Mar. 2022), initiation of mass vaccination immunization campaigns, and population wide SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis using nasopharyngeal testing becoming less applied in many countries, COVID-19 laboratory positive cases was shown to become a less representative metric of community incidence and less correlated to wastewater viral signal measurements (D'Aoust et al., 2022;Nattino et al., 2022;Xiao et al., 2021). Although early WWS work indicates strong relation between viral signal measurements in wastewater and hospital admission, there remains a knowledge gap with respect to the predictability of WWS as a metric of community disease burden throughout the pandemic. ...

Wastewater to clinical case (WC) ratio of COVID-19 identifies insufficient clinical testing, onset of new variants of concern and population immunity in urban communities