Abstract:
Access to safe and affordable drinking water and sanitation is highlighted in the
Sustainable Development Goal Target 6.1 while Target 6.3 addresses the release of
hazardous chemicals into water sources. Pharmaceuticals and personal care products in
treated drinking water have been receiving growing attention from environmental and
health organizations worldwide because they are more frequently being detected in water
sources. The fact that pharmaceuticals are manufactured with the intention to cause
biological effects continue raising concerns about the impact of unintentional exposure to
pharmaceuticals on human health. Despite the relatively fast growing numbers of studies
on the prevalence and potential risk associated with pharmaceuticals in potable water,
few studies that have addressed the potential human health risks associated with ingestion
of low doses antiretrovirals (ARVs) through drinking water. The aim of the study was to
assess the potential risks posed by long-term exposure to trace levels of ARVs in treated
and untreated water sources in South Africa (SA), more specifically the Gauteng
Province. A review of national and international literature was conducted to determine
the extent and risks posed by ARV contamination in water sources globally. From the
review it was evident that there is paucity of data on pharmaceuticals in water sources
worldwide, including Africa. Where such data was available, pharmaceuticals targeted
and detected in each investigation were country-dependent and linked to the most
commonly used drugs or antivirals in the region, e.g. oseltamivir in Japan, with only a
few reviews reporting on the presence and fate of ARVs in environmental samples. From
a review of global human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic it was evident that SA
uses more ARVs per capita compared to any other country fighting the HIV/acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic with 71% (5 million) of adults living with
HIV on combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). From 2003 to 2019 the drugs used in
the first-line regimen for adults were the most used for the management of HIV with
tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, lamivudine (3TC), emtricitabine and efavirenz (EFV) used
more widely from 2010-2019. A newly approved ARV, dolutegravir, was included in the
first-line regimen from 2020. A systematic review, conducted to establish which ARVs
have been detected in water sources in SA, revealed that all ARVs that have been used
historically in the first-line (stavudine, 3TC, EFV, nevirapine) and in second-line
(didanosine, ritonavir boosted lopinavir, zidovudine [AZT]) regimens have been detected in one or more water sources, including treated drinking water, surface water and
wastewater influent and effluent. To establish whether the low concentrations of ARVs
in drinking water posed a possible health risk to individual ingesting polluted drinking
water, a risk assessment was conducted. The method comprised of five general steps: a)
selection of ARVs to be assessed; b) derivation of acceptable daily intake; c) derivation
of predicted no effect concentrations; d) Exposure assessment - determination of
environmental concentrations; and e) risk calculation. The risk quotient values needed for
the risk assessment were sourced from studies that utilised acceptable daily intake values
derived from dose-response model studies. The present study showed that from the
current levels of AZT, 3TC and abacavir (ABC) detected in drinking water sources in SA,
the possible human health risk was insignificant, although harmful to aquatic species.
The predicted no effect concentrations were not available for the other ARVs present in
the water sources in SA. Overall, this study showed that selected ARVs, namely EFV, in
water were harmful to aquatic species, while the current levels of AZT, 3TC and ABC
detected in drinking water sources in SA posed an insignificant human health risk. The
study has therefore provided new data on the potential human health risk posed by
exposure to low levels of ARVs in treated water sources in SA.