Mass Loading
and Removal of Select Illicit Drugs in
Two Wastewater Treatment Plants in New York State and Estimation of
Illicit Drug Usage in Communities through Wastewater Analysis
posted on 2014-06-17, 00:00authored byBikram Subedi, Kurunthachalam Kannan
Sewage
epidemiology is a rapidly expanding field that can provide
information on illicit drug usage in communities, based on the measured
concentrations in samples from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs).
In this study, select illicit drugs (six drugs and eight metabolites)
were determined on a daily basis for a week in wastewater, suspended
particulate matter (SPM), and sludge from two WWTPs in the Albany
area in New York State. The WWTP that served a larger population (∼100 000,
with a flow rate of 83 300 m3/d) showed 3.2 (methadone)
to 51 (3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine; MDA) times higher mass flows
of illicit drugs than did the WWTP that served a smaller population
(∼15 000, with a flow rate of 6850 m3/d).
The consumption rate of target illicit drugs in the communities served
by the two WWTPs was estimated to range from 1.67 to 3510 mg/d/1000
people. Between the dissolved and particulate phases, the fraction
of methadone, 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (EDDP),
amphetamine, and MDA sorbed to SPM ranged from 34.3% to 41.1% of the
total mass in the waste stream. The removal efficiencies of illicit
drugs from the two WWTPs ranged from 4% (norcocaine) to 99% (cocaine);
however, methamphetamine, methadone, and EDDP showed a negative removal
in WWTPs. The environmental emission of illicit drugs from WWTP discharges
was calculated to range from 0.38 (MDEA) to 67.5 (EDDP) mg/d/1000
people. Other markers such as caffeine, paraxanthine, nicotine, and
cotinine were found to predict the concentrations of select illicit
drugs in raw wastewater (r2 = 0.20–0.79; p ≤ 0.029).