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First Study to Detect and Track Multiple Cancer-Causing Viruses in Wastewater

May 14, 2026
in Medicine
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First Study to Detect and Track Multiple Cancer-Causing Viruses in Wastewater — Medicine

First Study to Detect and Track Multiple Cancer-Causing Viruses in Wastewater

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A groundbreaking study published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology unveils a pioneering method to concurrently detect all known oncogenic viruses by analyzing viral genomes present in wastewater. This novel approach, developed through collaboration between Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, not only demonstrates feasibility but also signals a transformative potential for public health interventions targeting cancer-causing viruses. This advancement taps into the underappreciated domain where molecular virology meets environmental surveillance to anticipate and address oncogenic threats on a population scale.

Oncogenic viruses are responsible for approximately 20% of cancers globally, making their surveillance a critical public health challenge. Viruses such as human papillomavirus (HPV), hepatitis B and C viruses, and certain human polyomaviruses play central roles in initiating cancerous transformations in infected hosts. Unfortunately, because these viruses often lead to asymptomatic infections that may persist for years or even decades, their detection before malignancy arises remains difficult. Dr. Anthony Maresso, a molecular virologist at Baylor, highlights that traditional clinical approaches to identify such infections often lag behind, limiting early intervention strategies. Inspired by successes in viral wastewater analysis, his team explored whether similar surveillance could extend to monitoring oncogenic viruses community-wide.

Wastewater presents an untapped reservoir of viral genetic material shed by individuals through urine, feces, and skin cells that ultimately aggregate in sewage systems. By employing advanced genetic sequencing on these samples, scientists can attain a comprehensive snapshot of viral circulation without infringing on individual privacy or requiring invasive testing. Dr. Justin Clark, an assistant professor at Baylor, remarks that this environmental surveillance circumvents many barriers inherent to clinical diagnostics, yielding population-level insights capable of guiding public health policies more responsively.

The concept of monitoring viral pathogens via wastewater is not new, tracing its origins back over half a century when it was first utilized to detect poliovirus. More recently, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Baylor researchers were instrumental in pioneering wastewater surveillance to track SARS-CoV-2 variants and prevalence, providing invaluable data that anticipated outbreaks and guided healthcare resource allocation. Building on this expertise, the Texas Wastewater and Environmental Biomonitoring (TexWEB) initiative commenced viral genomic sequencing of wastewater from major Texan cities, sampling across a wide geographic and demographic spectrum since mid-2022.

This study employs a cutting-edge hybrid-capture genetic sequencing technique, capable of detecting over 3,000 distinct human viruses while simultaneously identifying novel viral mutations. The method enriches viral sequences from wastewater samples and subject them to high-throughput sequencing, generating granular data about virus presence, relative abundance, and evolutionary changes. Harihara Prakash, the study’s first author and bioinformatics analyst, emphasizes that this technology offers unparalleled resolution for viral surveillance within complex environmental samples.

Between May 2022 and May 2025, more than 40 wastewater collection points in 16 Texan cities were sampled, representing roughly 25% of the state’s population. The deep sequencing and computational analyses provide temporal dynamics of viral populations, enabling the team to discern both seasonal fluctuations and long-term trends in oncogenic virus prevalence. These data demonstrate not only viral presence but also shifts in viral dominance and diversity within communities.

All known oncogenic viruses were detected in the analyzed wastewater samples. Among the predominant viruses found were HPV, hepatitis B and C viruses, and human polyomaviruses associated with various cancers. The study further identified Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, both implicated in lymphomas and rare blood cancers. This comprehensive detection attests to the robustness of wastewater metagenomics in capturing viral diversity relevant to cancer etiology.

Intriguingly, the data reveal an upward trajectory in the abundance of multiple oncogenic viruses over the three-year study period. Significant surges following 2024 were noted in HPV, EBV, and certain polyomaviruses. The researchers hypothesize that these spikes may correlate with increased social interactions, including seasonal travel and heightened interpersonal contact during academic sessions, coinciding with the relaxation of COVID-19 social distancing mandates. Such epidemiological insights underscore the influence of behavioral and policy changes on viral transmission dynamics.

The team delved deeper into HPV subtype distributions due to its prominent role in cervical and oropharyngeal cancers. Despite the high-risk types being generally less prevalent than low-risk ones, the high-risk strains, particularly HPV-16 and HPV-18, exhibited distinct increasing trends late in the surveillance window. Notably, HPV-16 consistently outnumbered HPV-18 across samples, aligning with global clinical observations about their relative oncogenic burden. These findings underscore the method’s precision in parsing subtype-specific epidemiology from environmental samples.

Critical to public health implementation, the researchers detected all nine HPV genotypes targeted by the Gardasil 9 vaccine, validating wastewater surveillance as a tool to monitor vaccine-preventable oncogenic viruses. This capability holds promise for evaluating vaccine coverage effectiveness and identifying regions where immunization uptake may be insufficient, providing actionable data to optimize vaccination strategies and ultimately reduce virus-induced cancer incidence.

This pioneering research firmly establishes that oncogenic viruses can be tracked non-invasively via wastewater, broadening our capacity to surveil viral cancer risks within populations. By elucidating viral prevalence patterns and their temporal evolution, this approach opens new avenues to design timely and targeted public health interventions. Dr. Maresso stresses the prospective translation of these insights into tangible cancer prevention measures, harnessing environmental virology as an adjunct to traditional clinical epidemiology.

The study’s interdisciplinary team from Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston collectively contributed to this comprehensive effort. With generous funding from multiple state and federal sources, including the Texas Legislature and NIH, the research exemplifies the synergy of innovative technology, bioinformatics, and public health priorities converging to combat virus-associated cancers.

As wastewater metagenomics continues to evolve, its integration with epidemiological modeling and clinical surveillance promises an unprecedented vantage point on community health. This initiative exemplifies how environmental data streams can supplement conventional health monitoring to anticipate viral threats before they culminate in disease, fostering a paradigm shift in preventative oncology and viral epidemiology. The success of this approach embodies a beacon for future efforts, illuminating the potential of wastewater not just as waste but as a rich, real-time source of viral intelligence.


Subject of Research: Human tissue samples

Article Title: Detection, persistence, and rising prevalence of oncogenic viruses revealed by wastewater metagenomics

News Publication Date: 13-May-2026

Web References:

  • https://journals.asm.org/eprint/NAW85DPAZMGV9SR2YDHQ/full
  • https://tephi.texas.gov/early-detection
  • http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.00547-26

References:
Perez RK, Ross M, Tisza M, Javornik Cregeen SJ, Petrosino JF, Deegan J, Boerwinkle E, Maresso AN, Clark J, Prakash H. Detection, persistence, and rising prevalence of oncogenic viruses revealed by wastewater metagenomics. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 2026; DOI: 10.1128/aem.00547-26.

Keywords: Wastewater surveillance; Oncogenic viruses; Human papillomavirus; Epstein-Barr virus; Polyomaviruses; Viral metagenomics; Public health; Viral epidemiology; Cancer prevention; Hybrid-capture sequencing

Tags: cancer-causing virus asymptomatic infectionearly detection of cancer-causing viruseshepatitis B and C virus trackinghuman papillomavirus monitoringhuman polyomaviruses cancer riskinnovative public health interventionsmolecular virology environmental surveillanceoncogenic virus detection in wastewaterpopulation-level virus surveillancepublic health cancer preventionviral genome analysis wastewaterwastewater-based epidemiology oncogenic viruses
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