Avian flu found in wastewater of 10 Texas cities through virome sequencing by researchers at UTHealth Houston and Baylor College of Medicine

Sept. 12, 2024
Results published in NEJM.

Avian influenza A(H5N1) virus, which spread to cattle and infected 14 people this year, was detected using virome sequencing in the wastewater of 10 Texas cities by researchers at UTHealth Houston and Baylor College of Medicine.

The virome is the collection of viruses in a sample, in this case a wastewater sample.

The information was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Until March 2024, H5N1 had not been detected in 1,337 wastewater samples analyzed by the team. But from March 4 to July 15 (the end of data collection for this article), H5N1 was detected in 10 of 10 cities, 22 of 23 sites, and 100 of 399 samples. However, the abundance of H5N1 in wastewater samples collected over time did not correlate with influenza-related hospitalizations over the same time period, so the risk to the public was extremely low.

UTHealth Houston and Baylor established the wastewater testing program as part of the Texas Epidemic Public Health Institute (TEPHI).   

The sequencing protocol used by the team can detect genetic changes that might indicate an adaptation of the virus to mammals, perhaps even humans. Lack of clinical burden in humans and genomic information suggested that the source of the virus load found in wastewater during that time span came from animal origins. But continued surveillance is critical for monitoring any evolutionary adaptations that would indicate the potential for it to jump to humans, the researchers concluded.

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston release on Newswise

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