Community outbreak of legionnaires' disease: An investigation confirming the potential for cooling towers to transmit Legionella species

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Abstract

In August and September 1993, we investigated an outbreak of legionnaires' disease in Fall River, Massachusetts, that involved 11 persons; the attack rate was highest in Flint, a community of Fall River. All cases were infected with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 (Lp-1). A case-control study revealed that cases were more likely than matched controls to have visited sites in neighborhood A of Flint. Environmental sampling in Flint found that four of nine aerosol-producing devices sampled contained legionellae; only two, conjoined cooling towers on building A. contained Lp-1. Three independent methods of subtyping-monoclonal antibody subtyping, arbitrary primer polymerase chain reaction, and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis-revealed that Lp-1 isolates from three cases with culture-positive legionnaires' disease matched those from the cooling towers on building A. Water samples from the homes of cases with culture-positive legionnaires' disease contained no legionellae. The results of this epidemiologic and laboratory investigation indicate that the cooling towers on building A were the source of the outbreak of legionnaires' disease and confirm the importance of cooling towers in the transmission of legionnaires' disease.

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Keller, D. W., Hajjeh, R., Demaria, A., Fields, B. S., Pruckler, J. M., Benson, R. S., … Breiman, R. F. (1996). Community outbreak of legionnaires’ disease: An investigation confirming the potential for cooling towers to transmit Legionella species. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 22(2), 257–261. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinids/22.2.257

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