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Studies find factories
release pharmaceuticals
April 2009
U.S. Water News Online
WASHINGTON — Federal scientists testing for
pharmaceuticals in water have been finding significantly more medicine
residues in sewage downstream from public treatment facilities that handle
waste from drugmakers.
Early results from two pivotal federal studies compare wastewater at
treatment plants that handle sewage from drugmakers with those that do not.
The studies cover just a small fraction of the 1,886 pharmaceutical
manufacturing facilities counted in a 2006 U.S. Census report.
In one study, samples taken at two treatment plants down the sewer line from
drugmaking factories contained a range of pharmaceuticals - among them
opiates, a barbiturate and a tranquilizer at “much higher detection
frequencies and concentrations” than samples taken at other plants,
according to preliminary research by the U.S. Geological Survey.
One drug, the muscle relaxant metaxalone, was measured in treated sewage at
concentrations hundreds of times higher than the level at which federal
regulators can order a review of a drug's environmental impact.
Based on secrecy agreements with the researchers, the treatment plants were
not identified.
USGS researcher Herb Buxton, who co-chairs a White House task force on
pharmaceuticals in the environment, said it's important that federal
scientists test the pharmaceutical industry's claims that their wastewater
is not a meaningful source of pharmaceuticals in water.
“It's critical that those types of assumptions are confirmed through real
testing,” said Buxton.
In another study, Environmental Protection Agency researchers tested sewage
at a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., that serves a
major Pfizer Inc. factory. Bruce Merchant, Kalamazoo's public services
director, provided data that showed unusually high concentrations of the
antibiotic lincomycin entering the plant, a drug the factory was producing
around the time samples were collected.
“There's some product going down the drain,” said Merchant.
While nearly all the lincomycin was removed during wastewater treatment,
some did survive. According to a separate 2008 study, lincomycin combined in
minute concentrations with several other drugs that also have been detected
in surface water made human cancer and kidney cells and fish liver cells
proliferate.
Biologist Francesco Pomati, at the University of New South Wales in Sydney,
Australia, was so concerned with the findings that he and his colleagues
warned that chronic exposure to the combination of drugs via drinking water
could be “a potential hazard for particular human conditions, such as
pregnancy or infancy.”
In earlier experiments, lincomycin acted as a mutagen, changing genetic
information in bacteria, algae, microscopic aquatic animals and fish.
Pfizer spokesman Rick Chambers said that while the company does not test
wastewater from the facility for the drugs made on site, “compliance with
all environmental, health and safety laws is imperative to our business
operations worldwide.”
The two domestic studies follow a burst of recent research in Asia and
Europe that has started to link factories to the presence in water of drugs
including the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole, the pain reliever diclofenac and
the anticonvulsant carbamazepine, as well as an antihistamine, female sex
hormones and aspirin.
Researchers in India, where multinational companies have increasingly turned
for the manufacture of raw pharmaceutical ingredients, found that 100 pounds
a day of the antibiotic ciprofloxacin enters a river from a wastewater
treatment plant that processes sewage from dozens of pharmaceutical makers.
In Switzerland, a study sponsored by drugmaking giant Roche documented that
0.2 percent of active pharmaceutical ingredients escape during its own
processing. That kind of loss rate doesn't sound like a lot until it's
projected out over the entire annual production of drugs worldwide. Studies
in Taiwan and China also suggest drugmaking plants discharge product.
All of which raises questions about U.S. manufacturing.
“Is it as bad in the U.S. as it is in India? Probably not. But it does make
me think we should test,” said Kyla Bennett, a former EPA enforcement
officer who is now an ecologist and environmental attorney.
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