Data di Pubblicazione:
2008
Abstract:
On 3 October 2007, 40 participants with diverse expertise attended the workshop Tamiflu and the
Environment: Implications of Use under Pandemic Conditions to assess the potential human health
impact and environmental hazards associated with use of Tamiflu during an influenza pandemic.
Based on the identification and risk-ranking of knowledge gaps, the consensus was that oseltamivir
ethylester-phosphate (OE-P) and oseltamivir carboxylate (OC) were unlikely to pose an ecotoxicologic
hazard to freshwater organisms. OC in river water might hasten the generation of OCresistance
in wildfowl, but this possibility seems less likely than the potential disruption that could
be posed by OC and other pharmaceuticals to the operation of sewage treatment plants. The workgroup
members agreed on the following research priorities: a) available data on the ecotoxicology of
OE-P and OC should be published; b) risk should be assessed for OC-contaminated river water generating
OC-resistant viruses in wildfowl; c) sewage treatment plant functioning due to microbialinhibition by neuraminidase inhibitors and other antimicrobials used during a pandemic should beinvestigated; and d) realistic worst-case exposure scenarios should be developed. Additional modelingwould be useful to identify localized areas within river catchments that might be prone to high
pharmaceutical concentrations in sewage treatment plant effluent. Ongoing seasonal use of Tamiflu
in Japan offers opportunities for researchers to assess how much OC enters and persists in the
aquatic environment. Key words: antiviral, drug, ecotoxicology, influenza, pandemic, pharmaceutical,
pollution, sewage treatment plant, Tamiflu.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
BARRA CARACCIOLO, Anna
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