Published October 29, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Endocrine disrupting chemicals entering European rivers: Occurrence and adverse mixture effects in treated wastewater

  • 1. Department of Effect-Directed Analysis, UFZ – Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig, Germany
  • 2. Department of Biochemistry and Ecotoxicology, Federal Institute for Hydrology – BfG, Koblenz, Germany
  • 3. Department of Cell Toxicology, UFZ – Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig, Germany
  • 4. Department of Evolutionary Ecology and Environmental Toxicology, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
  • 5. Environmental Toxicology Unit – GhEnToxLab, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

Description

In the present study on endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in treated wastewater, we used chemical and effect-based tools to analyse 56 wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents from 15 European countries. The main objectives were (i) to compare three different receptor-based estrogenicity assays (ERα-GeneBLAzer, p-YES, ERα-CALUX®), and (ii) to investigate a combined approach of chemical target analysis and receptor-based testing for estrogenicity, glucocorticogenic activity, androgenicity and progestagenic activity (ERα-, GR-, ARand PR-GeneBLAzer assays, respectively) in treated wastewater. A total of 56 steroids and phenols were detected at concentrations ranging from 25 pg/L (estriol, E3) up to 2.4 μg/L (cortisone). WWTP effluents, which passed an advanced treatment via ozonation or via activated carbon, were found to be less contaminated, in terms of lower or no detection of steroids and phenols, as well as hormone receptor-mediated effects. This result was confirmed by the effect screening, including the three ERα-bioassays. In the GeneBLAzer assays, ERα-activity was detected in 82 %, and GR-activity in 73 % of the samples, while AR- and PR-activity were only measured in 14 % and 21 % of the samples, respectively. 17β-estradiol was confirmed as the estrogen dominating the observed estrogenic mixture effect and triamcinolone acetonide was the dominant driver of glucocorticogenic activity. The comparison of bioanalytical equivalent concentrations (BEQ) predicted from the detected concentrations and the relative effect potency (BEQchem) with measured BEQ (BEQbio) demonstrated good correlations of chemical target analysis and receptor-based testing results with deviations mostly within a factor of 10. Bioassay-specific effect-based trigger values (EBTs) from the literature, but also newly calculated EBTs based on previously proposed derivation options, were applied and allowed a preliminary assessment of the water quality of the tested WWTP effluent samples. Overall, this study demonstrates the high potential of linking chemical with effect-based analysis in water quality assessment with regard to EDC contamination.

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Additional details

Funding

PARC – Partnership for the Assessment of Risks from Chemicals 101057014
European Commission