Data mining-based screening of prevalent mixture systems in aquatic environments: A case study of antibiotics in the Yangtze River Basin

Chemical pollution in real-world environment often involves exposure to combinations of thousands of chemicals. However, due to the vast number of possible combinations, it is nearly impossible to conduct comprehensive mixture toxicity tests and risk assessments for all of them. This study applied f...

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Published inEcotoxicology and environmental safety Vol. 302; p. 118568
Main Authors Ding, Ting-Ting, Du, Shi-Lin, Liang, Hong-Yi, Zhang, Ya-Hui, Tao, Yong, Li, Ming-Xiao, Zhang, Jin, Liu, Shu-Shen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Inc 01.09.2025
Elsevier
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Summary:Chemical pollution in real-world environment often involves exposure to combinations of thousands of chemicals. However, due to the vast number of possible combinations, it is nearly impossible to conduct comprehensive mixture toxicity tests and risk assessments for all of them. This study applied frequent itemset mining, a technique traditionally used in market basket analysis, to develop a prevalent mixture system screening (PMSS) method for identifying combinations that frequently co-occur in the environment. PMSS enables efficient data mining of chemical concentrations, allowing for the identification of a small number of prevalent mixture systems from numerous theoretical possibilities. In this study, 16 antibiotics were detected in the Linjiang River and the Xuebu River. Using the PMSS method, 48 prevalent antibiotic combinations (PACs), primarily ranging from binary to septenary combinations, were identified in the Xuebu River and the Linjiang River. The PACs in the surface water presented acceptable ecological risks, whereas the PACs in the sediments exhibited moderate to even high ecological risks. Therefore, targeted risk management measures should be developed for the sediments to reduce the potential harm to benthic organisms. Additionally, a case study demonstrates the application of identified PACs in mixture design. This study provides essential methodological and material support for advancing research on mixture toxicity evaluation and risk assessment. [Display omitted] •A method for prevalent mixture system screening (PMSS) was developed.•The antibiotics in the Xuebu and Linjiang Rivers were systematically monitored.•Prevalent antibiotic combinations (PACs) in the rivers were identified using PMSS.•PACs in the sediment were found to pose moderate to high joint risks.•Mixture samples based on a septuple PAC in the Linjiang River were designed.
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ISSN:0147-6513
1090-2414
1090-2414
DOI:10.1016/j.ecoenv.2025.118568