Periodic Reporting for period 1 - CyTiS (Cytostatic compound fate and transport in soil and groundwater)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2022-11-01 do 2024-10-31
The first aim of this project was to use sorption studies to assess the potential for cytostatic compounds to be transported in soil environments to groundwater. Sorption of chemicals to soil is a process that can slow or prevent their transport to groundwater (a drinking water resource) and therefore can increase the likelihood of degredation of a compound in soil. The only previous study to assess sorption of cytostatic compounds to soil examined cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide, two closely related alkylating agents, in soil. CyTiS examined the sorption of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, capecitabine, and doxorubicin, four cytostatic compounds which are widely used globally to treat a wide range of cancers and each of which represents diffferent classes of cytostatic compounds. Assessing different classes of compounds increases the applicability of the findings of this project to a wider number of chemotherapy drugs, which is importnant because the lack of previous research in this area means that there is not yet a framework for assessing which classes of compounds may pose a risk for transport and which may be sequestered in the soil.
The second aim of this project was to examine the impact of cytostatic compounds on the health and diversity of microbial ecosystems in soil. No previous work has examined the effect of introducing cytostatic compounds to these communities. The importance of diverse soil communities in degrading all tyoes of organic material in waste streams makes it vital to understand how the introduciton of toxic pharmaceuticals, especially in the ever increasing amounts required for cancer treatment globally, may influence the health and productivity of these vital communities. CyTiS is the first project to have taken a preliminary survey of the potential impact that these compounds could be having, by examining the alterations to health and diversity of microbial communitites exposed to different classes of cytostatic compounds at both varied concentrations and over time.
The second goal of the CyTiS project was to examine the impact of cytostatic compounds upon microbial communities in soil. For the experiments, soil samples were obtained from two different septic system leaching fields; one field from a residence which had had a cancer patient using the system and one field from a residence with no known cancer patients. The microbial communities were analyzed in grab samples immediately after sampling to ensure that living communities were present. All experiments also included ‘control’ sample groups of soil which were not exposed to cytostatic compounds. One set of experiments used mixed batch reactors to assess the immediate effect of different concentrations of either cyclophosphamide or doxorubicin upon the microbial communities. Soil from each site was mixed with synthetic wastewater spiked with the target compound and left, covered but open for air exchange, for 24 hours before the soil was collected for DNA analysis. For another set of experiments, soil was placed in small columns, through which synthetic wastewater spiked with the target compound was gravity filtered three times a week for one to four weeks. At appropriate time points samples were collected. For all soil samples in both experiment groups, DNA was extracted and sequenced using amplicon sequencing. Community analysis examined the differences in taxonomic distribution among different treatments in both soil communities. This is the first community analysis performed assessing the impact of cytostatic compounds on soil microbiomes.
The diversity of soil microbial communities was affected to different degrees by exposure to cytostatic compounds. In the single dose tests with varied concentrations of either cyclophosphamide or doxorubicin, the taxonomic distributions varied somewhat among samples treated with different compounds, but the overall diversity did not appear to be affected by the treatment. Exposure over four weeks demonstrated more pronounced difference in taxonomic composition and overall community diversity among treated samples. These results suggest that cytostatic compounds retained in soils may have an impact on the composition of the soil microbial community, which could have reverberating impacts on the activity of these communities degrading other co-occuring organic contaminants. Further research should be conducted examining the direct impact of cytostatic compounds on microbial communities, but also on the capacity of these impacted communities to then degrade other compounds in waste streams. These preliminary results have implications for the long term effectiveness of soil microbiota to, for instance, continue to degrade domestic waste in leaching fields if once exposed to cytostatic compounds.