Pepper mild mottle virus as a potential indicator of occupational exposure to airborne viruses in wastewater treatment plants
Anna Jacobsen Lauvås, Pål Graff, Anani K Afanou, Caroline Duchaine, Marc Veillette, Mette Myrmel, Anne Straumfors

TL;DR
This study explores the risk of workers in wastewater treatment plants being exposed to airborne viruses, using Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV) as a potential indicator.
Contribution
The study introduces PMMoV as a potential indicator for assessing occupational exposure to aerosolized viruses in wastewater treatment plants.
Findings
Pathogenic viruses were detected in 22% of all samples, with PMMoV detected in 69% of samples.
PMMoV and pathogens were most frequently found at grids, biological cleansing, and sludge treatment stations.
Low overall virus concentrations were observed, but high point exposures may pose health risks to workers.
Abstract
Wastewater is a known carrier for human pathogenic viruses, with seasonal variations in concentrations, and wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) workers are a potentially overlooked occupational group regarding exposure to secondary aerosolized viruses. Exposure assessment of airborne pathogens is complicated by a lack of universal markers of viruses, no standardized sampling protocol, and challenges in detecting extremely low-abundant targets. In this study, we evaluate the risk of workers’ exposure to 4 pathogens, Adenovirus, Norovirus GI and GII, and Influenza A and the Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV) as an indicator for aerosolized viruses from wastewater, in 3 WWTPs in the Oslo region, Norway. We collected personal and stationary air samples in summer and winter and used digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) to enable the detection of low-abundant targets. Pathogenic viruses were detected in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Respiratory viral infections research · SARS-CoV-2 detection and testing
