Reduction of clarithromycin and sulfamethoxazole-resistant Enterococcus by pilot-scale solar-driven Fenton oxidation
Date
2014Author
Karaolia, PopiMichael, Irene
García-Fernández, Irene
Agüera, A.
Malato, Sixto
Fernàndez-Ibañez, Pilar
Fatta-Kassinos, Despo
Source
Science of the Total EnvironmentVolume
468-469Pages
19-27Google Scholar check
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The presence of pathogenic antibiotic-resistant bacteria in aquatic environments has become a health threat in the last few years. Their presence has increased due to the presence of antibiotics in wastewater effluents, which are not efficiently removed by conventional wastewater treatments. As a result there is a need to study the possible ways of removal of the mixtures of antibiotics present in wastewater effluents and the antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which may also spread the antibiotic resistance genes to other bacterial populations. In this study the degradation of a mixture of antibiotics i.e. sulfamethoxazole and clarithromycin, the disinfection of total enterococci and the removal of those resistant to: a) sulfamethoxazole, b) clarithromycin and c) to both antibiotics have been examined, along with the toxicity of the whole effluent mixture after treatment to the luminescent aquatic bacterium Vibrio fischeri. Solar Fenton treatment (natural solar driven oxidation) using Fenton reagent doses of 50mgL−1 of hydrogen peroxide and 5mgL−1 of Fe3+ in a pilot-scale compound parabolic collector plant was used to examine the disinfection and antibiotic resistance removal efficiency in different aqueous matrices, namely distilled water, simulated and real wastewater effluents. There was a faster complete removal of enterococci and of antibiotics in all aqueous matrices by applying solar Fenton when compared to photolytic treatment of the matrices. Sulfamethoxazole was more efficiently degraded than clarithromycin in all three aqueous matrices (95% removal of sulfamethoxazole and 70% removal of clarithromycin in real wastewater). The antibiotic resistance of enterococci towards both antibiotics exhibited a 5-log reduction with solar Fenton in real wastewater effluent. Also after solar Fenton treatment, there were 10 times more antibiotic-resistant enterococci in the presence of sulfamethoxazole than in the presence of clarithromycin. Finally, the toxicity of the treated wastewater to V. fischeri remained very low throughout the treatment time. •Solar Fenton oxidation of an antibiotic mixture in three water matrices was studied.•The disinfection of enterococci and removal of antibiotic resistance was examined.•There is higher antibiotic resistance prevalence to sulfamethoxazole than clarithromycin.•Enterococci resistance to a mixture is less prevalent than to one antibiotic.•The final solar Fenton effluent toxicity is low in real and simulated effluents.