Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2024)

Wastewater Surveillance to Confirm Differences in Influenza A Infection between Michigan, USA, and Ontario, Canada, September 2022–March 2023

  • Ryland Corchis-Scott,
  • Mackenzie Beach,
  • Qiudi Geng,
  • Ana Podadera,
  • Owen Corchis-Scott,
  • John Norton,
  • Andrea Busch,
  • Russell A. Faust,
  • Stacey McFarlane,
  • Scott Withington,
  • Bridget Irwin,
  • Mehdi Aloosh,
  • Kenneth K.S. Ng,
  • R. Michael McKay

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3008.240225
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 8
pp. 1580 – 1588

Abstract

Read online

Wastewater surveillance is an effective way to track the prevalence of infectious agents within a community and, potentially, the spread of pathogens between jurisdictions. We conducted a retrospective wastewater surveillance study of the 2022–23 influenza season in 2 communities, Detroit, Michigan, USA, and Windsor-Essex, Ontario, Canada, that form North America’s largest cross-border conurbation. We observed a positive relationship between influenza-related hospitalizations and the influenza A virus (IAV) wastewater signal in Windsor-Essex (ρ = 0.785; p<0.001) and an association between influenza-related hospitalizations in Michigan and the IAV wastewater signal for Detroit (ρ = 0.769; p<0.001). Time-lagged cross correlation and qualitative examination of wastewater signal in the monitored sewersheds showed the peak of the IAV season in Detroit was delayed behind Windsor-Essex by 3 weeks. Wastewater surveillance for IAV reflects regional differences in infection dynamics which may be influenced by many factors, including the timing of vaccine administration between jurisdictions.

Keywords