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Info on
a growing Health Threat -
Drugs in Our Water Supply
The human genome -- the blueprint for making a human being -- has
been almost completely cataloged. "Today we are learning the
language in which God created life,"
said President Clinton, announcing the accomplishment June 26. 2000[1]
Under a banner headline on page 1, the NEW YORK TIMES called it "an
achievement that represents a pinnacle of human self-knowledge."
The 3 billion genetic instructions that form a blueprint for human
life have now been cataloged, but the meaning of
most of those instructions remains unknown. Therefore, the practical
significance of deciphering the book of human life remains murky
except in one area: many new
pharmaceutical drugs will soon be possible.
Unfortunately, this is a mixed blessing. A raft of new drugs
may benefit those humans who need and can afford them, but new drugs
make serious trouble for the natural environment and for many of the
non-human creatures living there. Even for humans, drugs already
represent a major environmental challenge -- arguably the most
difficult chemical challenge that we face. The environment is
already heavily polluted with drugs and personal care products that
have passed through humans, entered sewage treatment plants and then
been discharged into waterways. (See REHW #614.) Increased drug
pollution of our waterways --including our drinking water -- is one
of the dark sides of the human genome project -- a dark
side that few acknowledge. (Lynn: my italics)
#614 - Drugs In The Water, September 03, 1998
Drugs In The Water
A new class of water pollutants has been discovered during the past
six years.[1] Pharmaceutical drugs given to people and to domestic
animals --including antibiotics,
hormones, strong pain killers, tranquilizers, and chemotherapy
chemicals given to cancer patients --are being measured in surface
water, in groundwater, and in drinking water at the tap. Large
quantities of drugs are
excreted by humans and domestic animals, and are distributed into
the environment by flushing toilets and by spreading manure and
sewage sludge onto and into soil.
German scientists report that anywhere from 30 to 60 drugs can be
measured in a typical water sample, if anyone takes the time to do
the proper analyses.[2] The concentrations of some drugs in water
are comparable to
the low parts-per-billion (ppb) levels at which pesticides are
typically found.[1] To some people this is reassuring, but others
are asking, "What is the long-term effect of
drinking, day after day, a dilute cocktail of pesticides,
antibiotics, pain killers, tranquilizers and chemotherapy agents?"
Of course no one knows the answer to such a question --it is simply beyond
the capabilities of science to sort out the many chemical
interactions that could occur in such a complex chemical soup. The
only solution
to such a problem would be prevention.
The first study that detected drugs in sewage took place at the Big
Blue River sewage treatment plant in Kansas City in 1976. The
problem was duly recorded in scientific
literature and then ignored for 15 years.[3]
In 1992,
researchers in Germany were looking for herbicides in water when
they kept noticing a chemical they couldn't
identify.[4] It turned out to be Clofibric Acid (CA), a drug used by
many people in large quantities (1 to 2 grams per day) to reduce
cholesterol levels in the blood.[1] Clofibric
acid is 2-(4)-chlorophenoxy-2-methyl propionic acid, a close
chemical cousin of the popular weed killer 2,4-D.[1] Based on that
early discovery, the search for clofibric acid (CA) in the
environment was stepped up.
Since 1992, researchers in Germany, Denmark and Sweden have been
measuring CA and other drugs in rivers, lakes, and the North Sea. To
everyone's surprise, it turns out that the entire North Sea contains
measurable
quantities of clofibric acid. Based on the volume of the Sea, which
is 12.7 quadrillion gallons (1.27 x 10E16 gallons), and the average
concentration of CA, which is 1
to 2 parts per trillion (ppt), researchers estimate that the Sea
contains 48 to 96 tons of clofibric acid with 50 to 100 tons
entering the Sea anew each year.[1]
The Danube River in
Germany and the Po River in Italy also contain measurable quantities
of clofibric acid.[5,6] Of more immediate concern to humans is the
finding that tap water in all parts of the city of Berlin contains
clofibric acid at concentrations between 10 and 165 ppt.[5] The
water supplies of other major cities remain to be tested.
As a result of this European work, a few U.S. researchers are now
beginning to pay attention to drugs in the environment. Individual
scientists within the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) have been concerned about this problem
for a decade,[7] but so far FDA has taken the official position that
excreted drugs are not a problem because the concentrations found in
the
environment are usually below one part per billion (ppb).[2]
Drugs are designed to have particular characteristics. For example,
30% of the drugs manufactured between 1992
and 1995 are lipophilic, meaning that they tend to dissolve in fat
but not in water.[8] This gives them the ability to pass through
cell membranes and act inside cells.
Unfortunately, it
also means that, once they are excreted into the environment, they
enter food chains and concentrate as they move upward into larger
predators. Many drugs are also designed to be persistent, so that
they can retain their chemical structure long enough to do their
therapeutic work. Unfortunately, after they are excreted, such drugs
also tend to persist in the
environment. A landfill used by the Jackson Naval Air Station in
Florida contaminated groundwater with a plume of chemicals that has
been moving slowly underground for
more than 20 years. The drugs pentobarbital (a barbiturate),
meprobamate (a tranquilizer sold as Equanil and Miltown) and
phensuximide (an anticonvulsant) are
still measurable in that groundwater plume. [8,pg.362]
When a human or an animal is given a drug, anywhere from 50% to 90%
of it is excreted unchanged. The remainder is excreted in the form
of metabolites --chemicals produced as byproducts of the body's
interaction with the drug. Researchers report that some of the
metabolites are more lipophilic and more persistent than the
original drugs from which they were derived.
Because of the complexity of the chemistry involved in drug
metabolism, and the interactions of the metabolites with the natural
environment, Danish researchers say is it
"practically impossible to estimate predicted
environmental concentrations (PEC) of any
medical substances with
available knowledge."[8,pg.385]
Yet U.S. regulatory policy for new drugs depends entirely upon
estimating concentrations that might result from
excretion. When a new drug is proposed for market, FDA requires the
manufacturer to conduct a risk assessment that estimates the
concentrations that will be found in the environment. If the risk
assessment concludes that the concentration will be less than one
part per billion, the drug is assumed to pose acceptable risks.[2]
FDA has never turned down a proposed new drug based on
estimated environmental concentrations, and no actual testing is
conducted after a drug is marketed to see if the environmental
concentration was estimated correctly.
German chemists have found that many drugs can be measured at
environmental concentrations that exceed one ppb. And of
course several drugs measured together can exceed one ppb.
Furthermore, there is ample
evidence from research conducted during the past decade showing that
some chemicals have potent effects on wildlife at concen-trations
far below one ppb. For example
estradiol, the female sex hormone (and a common water pollutant),
can alter the sex characteristics of certain fish at concen-trations
of 20 ppt, which is 1/50 of one ppb.[2]
Another problem resulting from drugs in the environment is bacteria
developing resistance to antibiotics. The general problem of
antibiotic- resistant bacteria has been
recognized for more than a decade. (See REHW #402.) Antibiotics are
only useful to humans so long as bacteria do not become resistant to
their effects. Hospital sewage
systems discharge substantial quantities of antibiotics into the
environment.[9] Bacteria exposed to antibiotics in sewage sludge, or
water, have an opportunity to develop
resistance.
Janet Raloff of SCIENCE NEWS quotes Stuart Levy, who
directs the Center for Adaptation Genetics and Drug Resistance at
Tufts University in Boston, saying, "[T] hese antibiotics may be
present at levels of consequence to bacteria -- levels that could
not only alter the ecology of the environment but also give rise to
antibiotic resistance."[2]
What can we learn from the emergence of this new problem?
1) Hospitals and the health care industry are the major sources of
these problems, especially antibiotics and chemotherapy
chemicals.[10] The large national coalition
of environmental and health groups, Health Care Without Harm,[11]
might consider tackling this difficult but important problem.
2) Sewage sludge provides a major pathway by which drugs enter the
environment. Until the drug problem is understood and controlled, it
provides a solid scientific
rationale for labeling sewage sludge a dangerous soil amendment, the
use of which should be forbidden.
3) For a long time, people have worried that the world was going to
run out of natural resources. It is now apparent that we have run
out places to throw things away. There is no place left where we can
throw away exotic substances without affecting people or wildlife
(upon whose well being we ultimately depend).
From the viewpoint of disposal, not many decades ago the world still
looked pretty empty. Today there can be no doubt that the world is
full --full of people armed with
double-edged technologies. To survive in a full world will require
quite different attitudes. We need to curb our numbers. We need to
curb our technologies. We need to curb our appetites. And we need to
operate from a
position of humility. We should assume that anything we do will have
negative consequences on the rest of the planet. We must limit our
technological interventions into
nature long before we have definitive scientific proof of harm. This
is the principle of precautionary action, and if we don't adopt it,
nature will get along just fine without us.
--Peter Montague (National Writers Union, UAW Local
1981/AFL-CIO) Rachel's Environment &
Health Weekly #702 - Pay Dirt
From The Human Genome, July 06, 2000
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| keyword: drug residues water, prozac water,
hormones water, , drugs water, pharmaceutical water,
pharmaceutical drugs drinking water |
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For more disturbing information, check this story:
An Environmentalist's Nightmare
Don't worry - drink your nice water - REALLY -DON'T WORRY
Drinking our Drugs (and other people's, too)
References:
[1] Hans-Rudolf Buser and Markus D. Muller,
"Occurrence of the Pharmaceutical Drug Clofibric Acid
and the Herbicide Mecoprop in Various Swiss Lakes and
in the North Sea," ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY Vol. 32, No. 1 (1998), pgs.
188-192.
[2] Janet Raloff, "Drugged Waters," SCIENCE NEWS
Vol. 153, No. 12 (March 21, 1998), pgs. 187-189.
[3] C. Hignite and D. L. Azarnoff, "Drugs and drug
metabolites as environmental contaminants:
chlorophenoxyisobutyrate and salicyclic acid in sewage
water effluent," LIFE SCIENCES Vol. 20, No. 2
(January 15, 1977), pgs. 337-341.
[4] H.J. Stan and Thomas Heberer, "Pharmaceuticals in
the Aquatic Environment," ANALUSIS MAGAZINE
Vol. 25, No. 7 (1997), pgs. M20-M23.
[5] Thomas Heberer and H.-J. Stan, "Determination of
Clofibric Acid and N-(phenylsulfonyl)-Sarcosine in
Sewage, River, and Drinking Water,"
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF
ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Vol. 67 (1997), pgs. 113-124. And see: Thomas
Heberer and others, "Detection of Drugs and Drug
Metabolites in Ground Water Samples of a Drinking
Water Treatment Plant," FRESENIUS
ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN Vol. 6 (1997), pgs.
438-443.
[6] "Pille im Brunnen [Pills in the Fountain]," DER
SPIEGEL No. 26 (June 24, 1996), pgs. 154-155,
translated for us by Thea Lindauer, Annapolis, Maryland.
[7] Personal communication from Maurice Zeeman, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, March, 1998.
[8] B. Halling-Sorensen and others, "Occurrence, Fate
and Effects of Pharmaceutical Substances in the
Environment --A Review," CHEMOSPHERE Vol. 36,
No. 2 (1998), pgs. 357-393.
[9] Andreas Hartmann and others, "Identification of
Fluoroquinone Antibiotics as the Main Source of umuC
Genotoxicity in Native Hospital Wastewater,"
ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND
CHEMISTRY Vol. 17, No. 3 (1998), pgs. 377-382.
[10] T. Steger-Hartmann and others, "Biological
Degradation of Cyclophosphamide and Its Occurrence in
Sewage Water," ECOTOXICOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY Vol. 36 (1997), pgs.
174-179.
[11] Contact: Charlotte Brody, Health Care Without
Harm, c/o CCHW Center for Health, Environment and
Justice, P.O. Box 6806, Falls Church, Virginia 22040.
Phone (703) 237-2249. See www.noharm.org.
Descriptor terms: drugs; pharmaceuticals; water pollution;
sewage sludge; precautionary principle; fda; north sea;
Germany.
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