Abstract

Legionella spp. are considered an important cause of potentially preventable morbidity and mortality, making environmental surveillance a crucial component of risk assessment plans. In this work, 20,319 water samples were collected in 3,983 environmental surveys during a 16-year period by ARPA, the Regional Agency for Environmental Protection, Friuli Venezia Giulia, and the results were studied to better understand the diffusion mechanisms of Legionella. The data showed a strong seasonal signal, a prevalence of L. pneumophila serogroup 2–15 in most environments (63% of positive samples), a prevalence of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 in swimming pool-associated environments (82% of positive samples), a persistent presence of Legionella in hospitals and a recurrent presence of Legionella in other facilities such as hotels, possibly years after interventions, highlighting the difficulty of eradicating the bacteria. Retrospective spatio-temporal analyses on geocoded historical data were carried out with SaTScan using an ordinal model with risk as a covariate to identify potential clusters with an excess of cases in the higher-risk categories. Although no outbreaks occurred during the period of study, such analyses identified spatially restricted zones with unusual contamination, which sometimes were also areas in which several surveys triggered by notifications of clinical cases were performed. Simulations of periodic prospective analyses permitted the assessment of the efficacy of the method in early detection of such clusters. The proposed method may be a useful tool in environmental surveillance, prevention and control of Legionella.

Highlights

  • L. pneumophila is the main causative agent of legionellosis—pulmonary morbid forms normally are acquired by inhalation of aerosols containing the bacterium—which occurs in various pathologies among which pneumonia is the most severe form [1]

  • ARPA-FVG received water samples collected at various sites by qualified personnel of the Local Health Units

  • We have analyzed a large data set of historical data about environmental surveys performed in Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy, over a time span of approximately 16 years

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Summary

Introduction

L. pneumophila is the main causative agent of legionellosis—pulmonary morbid forms normally are acquired by inhalation of aerosols containing the bacterium—which occurs in various pathologies among which pneumonia is the most severe form [1]. Legionellosis is considered a water-borne disease [2] and Legionella is among the main emerging pathogenic. Spatio-temporal analysis of Legionella spp. in a region of northeastern Italy

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