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Polyamide microplastics in wastewater as vectors of cationic pharmaceutical drugs

Chemosphere 2021 60 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Antony Wagstaff, Linda A. Lawton, Bruce Petrie

Summary

Researchers investigated whether polyamide microplastics in wastewater can adsorb pharmaceutical drugs and transport them into the environment. They found significant adsorption of hydrophobic pharmaceuticals like propranolol, amitriptyline, and fluoxetine, with limited desorption in river water but increased release in simulated gastric fluids. The findings suggest that microplastics discharged from wastewater treatment could carry adsorbed medications over long distances and release them if ingested by wildlife or humans.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Reported here is the first study to investigate the adsorption of pharmaceutical drugs to microplastics in wastewater. Wastewater is an environmental source of microplastics and pharmaceuticals, which is discharged as treated effluent or combined sewer overflows. In this study, adsorption of cationic pharmaceuticals, with a range of octanol-water distribution coefficients, to polyamide (Nylon 12) microplastics was investigated in real wastewater samples. Significant adsorption was observed for the more hydrophobic pharmaceuticals studied, propranolol, amitriptyline, and fluoxetine, with equilibrium reached within 24 h. Microplastic-wastewater distribution coefficients for these three pharmaceuticals were 191, 749 and 1020 L kg, respectively. Favourable wastewater conditions for adsorption of pharmaceuticals to polyamide were at pH > 7, summer temperatures (20 °C), and no stormwater dilution. Adsorption of the more hydrophilic pharmaceuticals atenolol, pseudoephedrine, metoprolol, and tramadol was ≤7% under all conditions and considered insignificant. Limited desorption (7-17%) of propranolol, amitriptyline, and fluoxetine was observed in river water over 24 h. This suggests that microplastics may be able to transport adsorbed pharmaceuticals for considerable distances after discharge. In simulated gastric fluids their desorption increased to 24-27% and 40-58% in cold- and warm-blooded temperatures respectively. The findings demonstrate that wastewater microplastics could act as a vector of pharmaceutical drugs, from wastewater treatment plants to aquatic organisms. However, further research is needed to better appreciate the risks posed by pharmaceuticals adsorbed to microplastics in comparison to other organic particulates found in wastewater.

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