Frederik Hammes, Marco Gabrielli, Alessio Cavallaro, Antonia Eichelberg, Sofia Barigelli, Melina Bigler, Sébastien P. Faucher, Hans Peter Füchslin, Valeria Gaia, Laura Gómez-Valero, Marianne Grimard-Conea, Charles N. Haas, Kerry A. Hamilton, Hannah Greenwald, Yann Héchard, Tim Julian, Laurine Kieper, Ursula Lauper, Xavier Lefebvre, Daniel Mäusezahl, Catalina Ortiz, Ana Pereira, Michèle Prévost, Hunter Quon, Siddhartha Roy, Ana R. Silva, Émile Sylvestre, Lizhan Tang, Elliston Vallarino Reyes, Paul W. J. Jvan der Wielen and Michael B. Waak
Article (2025)
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Open Access to the full text of this document Published Version Terms of Use: Creative Commons Attribution Download (2MB) |
Abstract
The disease burden from Legionella spp. infections has been increasing in many industrialized countries and, despite decades of scientific advances, ranks amongst the highest for waterborne diseases. We review here several key research areas from a multidisciplinary perspective and list critical research needs to address some of the challenges of Legionella spp. management in engineered environments. These include: (i) a consideration of Legionella species diversity and cooccurrence, beyond Legionella pneumophila only; (ii) an assessment of their environmental prevalence and clinical relevance, and how that may affect legislation, management, and intervention prioritization; (iii) a consideration of Legionella spp. sources, their definition and prioritization; (iv) the factors affecting Legionnaires’ disease seasonality, how they link to sources, Legionella spp. proliferation and ecology, and how these may be affected by climate change; (v) the challenge of saving energy in buildings while controlling Legionella spp. with high water temperatures and chemical disinfection; and (vi) the ecological interactions of Legionella spp. with other microbes, and their potential as a biological control strategy. Ultimately, we call for increased interdisciplinary collaboration between multiple research domains, as well as transdisciplinary engagement and collaboration across government, industry, and science as the way toward controlling and reducing Legionella-derived infections.
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| Department: |
Department of Mechanical Engineering Department of Civil, Geological and Mining Engineering |
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| PolyPublie URL: | https://publications.polymtl.ca/65920/ |
| Journal Title: | FEMS Microbiology Reviews (vol. 49) |
| Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
| DOI: | 10.1093/femsre/fuaf022 |
| Official URL: | https://doi.org/10.1093/femsre/fuaf022 |
| Date Deposited: | 03 Jun 2025 09:40 |
| Last Modified: | 08 Jan 2026 12:16 |
| Cite in APA 7: | Hammes, F., Gabrielli, M., Cavallaro, A., Eichelberg, A., Barigelli, S., Bigler, M., Faucher, S. P., Füchslin, H. P., Gaia, V., Gómez-Valero, L., Grimard-Conea, M., Haas, C. N., Hamilton, K. A., Greenwald, H., Héchard, Y., Julian, T., Kieper, L., Lauper, U., Lefebvre, X., ... Waak, M. B. (2025). Foresight 2035: A perspective on the next decade of research on the management of Legionella spp. in engineered aquatic environments. FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 49, fuaf022 (18 pages). https://doi.org/10.1093/femsre/fuaf022 |
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