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Leveraging regulatory monitoring data for quantitative microbial risk assessment of Legionella pneumophila in cooling towers

Émile Sylvestre, Dominique Charron, Xavier Lefebvre, Émilie Bédard et Michèle Prévost

Article de revue (2025)

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Abstract

Cooling towers are critical engineered water systems for air conditioning and refrigeration but can create favorable conditions for Legionella pneumophila growth and aerosolization. Human exposure to L. pneumophila-contaminated aerosols can cause Legionnaire's disease. Routine monitoring of L. pneumophila in cooling towers offers possibilities to develop quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) models to guide system design, operation, control, and maintenance. Here, we used the regulatory monitoring database from Quebec, Canada, to develop statistical models for predicting L. pneumophila concentration variability in cooling towers and integrate these models into a screening-level QMRA model to predict human health risks. Analysis of 105,463 monthly L. pneumophila test results revealed that the exceedance rate of the 10⁴ colony-forming unit (CFU) per liter threshold was constant at 10 % from 2016 to 2020, emphasizing the need to better validate the efficacy of corrective measures following the threshold exceedances. Among 2852 cooling towers, 51.2 % reported no detections, 38.5 % had up to nine positives, and 10.2 % over ten. The gamma or the lognormal distributions adequately described site-specific variations in L. pneumophila concentrations, but parametric uncertainty was very high for the lognormal distribution. We showed that rigorous model comparison is essential to predict peak concentrations accurately. Using QMRA, we found that an average L. pneumophila concentration below 1.4 × 10⁴ CFU L⁻¹ should be maintained in cooling towers to meet a health-based target of 10⁻⁶ DALY/pers.-year for clinical severity infections. We identified 137 cooling towers at risk of exceeding this limit, primarily due to the observation or prediction of rare peak concentrations above 10⁵ CFU L⁻¹. Effective mitigation of those peaks is critical to controlling public health risks associated with L. pneumophila.

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Département: Département de génie mécanique
Département des génies civil, géologique et des mines
Centre de recherche: CIEP - Chaire industrielle en eau potable
Organismes subventionnaires: NSERC, Public Service and Procurement Canada, Régie du Batiment du Québec, Société Québécoise des Infrastructures, Centre d'expertise en analyse environnementale du Québec du ministère de l'Environnement, de la Lutte contre les changements climatiques, de la Faune et des Parcs, Bioalert solutions, IDEXX
Numéro de subvention: ALLRP 545363-19, RGPIN-2021-04341
URL de PolyPublie: https://publications.polymtl.ca/64446/
Titre de la revue: Science of The Total Environment (vol. 975)
Maison d'édition: Elsevier
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179293
URL officielle: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179293
Date du dépôt: 07 avr. 2025 14:59
Dernière modification: 06 déc. 2025 05:38
Citer en APA 7: Sylvestre, É., Charron, D., Lefebvre, X., Bédard, É., & Prévost, M. (2025). Leveraging regulatory monitoring data for quantitative microbial risk assessment of Legionella pneumophila in cooling towers. Science of The Total Environment, 975, 179293 (13 pages). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179293

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