General Industry News

Accuracy of Conventional Legionella Testing Protocol Challenged

Newly published Phigenics research paper demonstrates test inaccuracies due to sample holding time .

Phigenics and Legionella

Phigenics LLC, an innovative water management services company, announced today the publication of a research paper that demonstrates up to 33% false-positive test results for Legionella bacteria when following conventional sampling methods. A false-positive result means the test indicated Legionella was present in the water system at detectable levels when in fact it was below detectable levels at the time the sample was taken from the building water system.
 
The greatest degree of error was found in utility water systems where 33 percent of 580 samples shipped from hundreds of building water systems showed false-positive results. There were also a significant number of false-negative results observed from many thousands of shipped water samples transported from hundreds of building water systems. “Inaccuracy in Legionella Tests of Building Water Systems Due to Sample Holding Time,” was recently published by Phigenics in Water Research, the official journal of the International Water Association (IWA).
 “The impact of the research is significant in that it provides robust statistical proof that results from conventional Legionella testing can be inaccurate and misleading,” says Dr. William McCoy, Chief Technology Officer of Phigenics and Chair of ASHRAE Standards Project Committee 188:  - Prevention of Legionellosis Associated with Building Water Systems.
 
Doctor McCoy continues: “These inaccuracies can be eliminated by culturing the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease immediately after taking a water sample on-site at the facility location. This simple change in procedure eliminates the potential of bacterial amplification or decline in water samples during transport to the laboratory. Shipping water samples to the laboratory has been shown to cause inaccurate or misleading results from many building water systems.”
 
“We are predicting significant increases in Legionella testing over the coming years in commercial and institutional markets due to new Legionella Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) standards such as ASHRAE Standard 188P and others that are scheduled for official publishing over the next twelve months or so,” says Ashton McCombs, President of Phigenics. “This research is very important because the last thing anyone wants is to be making Legionella treatment and control decisions based on inaccurate testing results.”
 
“It is possible to culture bacteria immediately upon taking a water sample on-site at the facility location, and thereby completely eliminate testing inaccuracies caused by water sample transit time,” says Dr. McCoy.
“The problem historically has been that it was not commercially practical to implement on-site cultures at any scale. This is an important problem that Phigenics has solved by offering a field practical method to immediately start the culture on-site. Instead of shipping a water sample, the user ships the cultured bacteria. Starting the culture immediately also significantly reduces the time required before test results can be reported to the user. ”
 
For a full copy of “Inaccuracy in Legionella Tests of Building Water Systems Due to Sample Holding Time,” published in Water Research, or to obtain more information on Legionnaires’ disease, go to http://www.phigenics.com/news/archive/.


Links

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to Pollution Engineering Magazine. 

You must login or register in order to post a comment.

Multimedia

Videos

Image Galleries

WEFTEC 2006

WEFTEC®, the Water Environment Federation’s Annual Technical Exhibition and Conference, is the biggest meeting of its kind in North America and offers thousands of water quality professionals from around the world the best water quality education and training available today.

Podcasts

This podcast addresses solutions to problems that can affect bioremediation in acidic aquifers, such as:

  • Impacts of pH on reductive dechlorination rates
  • Different bases to raise aquifer pH

Speaker- Dr. Stephen Richardson, P.E., Technical Lead for Research and Development, EOS Remediation

More Podcasts

THE MAGAZINE

Pollution Engineering

May 2013 PE cover 100px

2013 May

Check out the latest edition of Pollution Engineering Magazine today!
Table Of Contents Subscribe

EPA emissions legislation

Industry & states petitioned the Supreme Court to review EPA’s GHG emissions for power plants and cars. Do you think the court will deny the petition?
View Results Poll Archive

THE POLLUTION ENGINNERING STORE

M:\General Shared\__AEC Store Katie Z\AEC Store\Images\PE\toward-zero-discharge.gif
Urban and Highway Stormwater Pollution: Concepts and Engineering

Presents the practical work of leading experts working with highly impacted areas across the world.

More Products

Editor's Choice Awards

2013 PE Editors ChoicePollution Engineering magazine will be choosing the top, most innovative products and presenting companies that are chosen with an Editor's Choice Awards. The announcement will be published in the July 2013 issue. Visit the editor's choice awards page today!

PE Digital Editions

1112PE_Cover.jpgView Pollution Engineering's popular digital editions with interactive features. To receive each digital issue as soon as it’s available and delivered straight to your inbox, subscribe now!

STAY CONNECTED

FacebookTwitterYoutubeLinkedIn