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Legionella in drinking water: the detection method matters.

Nicole ZachariasFelix WaßerLia FreierKirsten SpiesChristoph KochStefan PleischlNico T MuttersThomas Kistemann
Published in: Journal of water and health (2023)
Legionella concentrations in drinking water have been regulated for decades and are evaluated with regard to their concentrations in drinking water plumbing systems (DWPS). The respective action levels differ at the international level. In Germany, the Federal Environment Agency (UBA) specifies the application of ISO 11731 for the detection of legionella in drinking water and gives a binding recommendation for the methods to be used for culturing and evaluation. Effective from 01 March 2019, the UBA recommendation was revised. The utilized culture media in the culture approach were altered, consequently affecting the spectrum of legionella colonies detected in drinking water. Using data from a routine legionella monitoring of a large laboratory, over a period of 6 years and 17,270 individual drinking water samples, allowed us to assess the impact of the alteration on the assessment of DWPS. By comparing the amount of action level exceedances before and after the method change, it could be demonstrated that exceedances are reported significantly more often under the new method. Consequently, the corresponding action level for evaluation of legionella contamination and the resulting risk to human health needs to be revised to avoid the misleading impression of increased health risk.
Keyphrases
  • drinking water
  • health risk
  • human health
  • health risk assessment
  • risk assessment
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification
  • transcription factor
  • heavy metals
  • real time pcr