Publications by authors named "Alicia L Garcia-Costa"

Over the past decade there has been an increasing concern on the presence of cytostatics (also known as anticancer drugs) in natural waterbodies. The conventional wastewater treatments seem not to be effective enough to remove them, and therefore new processes must be considered. This work investigates the performance of ozonation (O), catalytic ozonation (O/Fe) and peroxone (O/HO) processes, under dark or UV radiation conditions, for the degradation of cytostatics of worldwide concern.

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Cytostatics are toxic pharmaceuticals, whose presence in surfaces puts healthcare workers at risk. These drugs might also end up in hospital effluents (HWW), potentially damaging aquatic ecosystems. Bicalutamide is a cytostatic extensively consumed worldwide, but few analytical methods exist for its quantification and most of them require advanced techniques, such as liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS), which are very complex and expensive for large monitoring studies.

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As the number of cancer patients increases, so does the consumption of cytostatic drugs, which are commonly used in chemotherapy. These compounds are already ubiquitous in wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents and natural water streams, revealing the urgent need for efficient technologies for their removal from the aqueous phase. This work presents the elimination of five cytostatics of concern, found in Portuguese WWTP effluents: bicalutamide (BICA), capecitabine (CAP), cyclophosphamide (CYC), ifosfamide (IFO) and mycophenolic acid (MPA), using non-catalytic ozonation.

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This paper addresses the removal of four aromatic hydrocarbons typically found in petrochemical wastewater: benzene (B), toluene (T), o-xylene (X), and naphthalene (N), by microwave-assisted catalytic wet peroxide oxidation (MW-CWPO) using activated carbon (AC) as catalyst. Under the studied conditions, complete pollutant elimination (B, 1.28 mM; T, 1.

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