The Vigie Covid-19 solution now can track signs of the Omicron variant in wastewater, acting as an early warning system of monitoring the pandemic's progression.
Veolia, the IPMC (CNRS-Université Côte d’Azur), the start-up IAGE and the Bataillon des Marins Pompiers de Marseille (BMPM), continue their collaboration to optimize Vigie Covid-19, their pioneering solution to detect and quantify the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater in record time. Launched in September 2020, this method has already made it possible to detect and quantify the Alpha, Beta and Gamma variants, then the Delta variant this summer, and now the Omicron variant.
Used experimentally as a complement to existing clinical data, the presence of Sars-Cov-2 in wastewater has the potential to become a new indicator to help manage the pandemic. In France, the National Reference Laboratory appointed by the Ministries for Health and for the Ecological Transition , has therefore recently launched a process to harmonize and consolidate such monitoring methods.
The Vigie Covid-19 solution is the most operational in Europe for quantifying SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater to date. With the PCR screening techniques, the solution allows to identify the presence of known mutations originating from existing variants and evaluate their concentration. Then, the sequencing methods identify the mutations, as well as the variant’s proportions.
The Vigie Covid-19 solution is the most operational in Europe for quantifying SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater to date. With the PCR screening techniques, the solution allows to identify the presence of known mutations originating from existing variants and evaluate their concentration. Then, the sequencing methods identify the mutations, as well as the variant’s proportions.
The campaign on the Omicron variant detection, carried out by Veolia and its partners in December on a dozen municipal and industrial sites across Europe, made it possible to continue reinforcing the Vigie Covid-19 solution with several significant advances to be noted:
● Only two weeks are needed to launch a monitoring campaign for a new variant;
● PCR screening of a sample now requires only a few hours to one day;
● Sequencing a sample takes less than a day without prior tuning;
● The results can be used as soon as the new variant arises in a region.
