Cholesterol-lowering drugs, antidiabetics, antiarrhythmics, antidepressants, and antibiotics belong to the most prescribed drugs worldwide. Because of the manufacture, excretion, and improper disposal of leftover drugs, the drugs enter waste waters and, subsequently, surface waters. They have been detected in surface waters all over the world, from concentrations of ng/l to concentrations several orders of magnitude higher. Since pharmaceuticals are designed to be both biologically and chemically stable, photochemical degradation by sun radiation represents a way of transformation in the natural environment. This review provides a survey of how selected drugs of the above-mentioned classes affect aquatic organisms of different trophic level. The emphasis is on the harmful effects of phototransformation products, an area of scientific investigation that has only attracted attention in the past few years, revealing the surprising fact that products of photochemical degradation might be even more toxic to aquatic organisms than the parent drugs.
Pathways of photochemical degradation of a cardiovascular drug verapamil under conditions relevant to natural waters and the toxicity of the photoproducts to Daphnia magna were investigated. Photodegradation was shown to proceed via photocatalysed mechanism. Two main photodegradation pathways were recognised: the first leading to hydroxylation at the methylamino position followed by splitting of verapamil molecule into two fragments, and the second providing the main active metabolite of verapamil, norverapamil, and a series of norverapamil isomers, followed again by their splitting at the amino group position. Twenty-two products of photodegradation were identified. Toxicity assays in sublethal concentrations of the parental drug, of the photoproduct mixture, and of norverapamil revealed no direct negative response in Daphnia magna to verapamil. On the other hand, photochemical products significantly lowered the number of juveniles, number of clutches, and body size of Daphnia. The exposition of Daphnia to norverapamil showed the same but even more pronounced effects than its exposition to the mixture of photoproducts, which leads to the conclusion that norverapamil is mainly responsible for the toxicity of photoproduct mixture and represents a noteworthy threat to aquatic invertebrates.