Journal Pre-proof Residential water heater cleaning and occurrence of Legionella in Flint, MI William J. Rhoads, Taylor N. Bradley, Anurag Mantha, Lauren Buttling, Tim Keane, Amy Pruden, Marc A. Edwards PII:
S0043-1354(19)31216-3
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.115439
Reference:
WR 115439
To appear in:
Water Research
Received Date: 26 September 2019 Revised Date:
13 December 2019
Accepted Date: 22 December 2019
Please cite this article as: Rhoads, W.J., Bradley, T.N., Mantha, A., Buttling, L., Keane, T., Pruden, A., Edwards, M.A., Residential water heater cleaning and occurrence of Legionella in Flint, MI, Water Research (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.115439. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
City Water Quality
Sediment Mobilization to Outlet? Occurrence of and Impact on Legionella?
Sediments Nutrients Cu Surface Area Fe Zn Cl2 Consumption
Effective Removal?
1
Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Occurrence of Legionella in Flint, MI
2
William J. Rhoads1*, Taylor N. Bradley1,2, Anurag Mantha1, Lauren Buttling1,3, Tim Keane4,
3
Amy Pruden1, Marc A. Edwards1*
4
1
Virginia Tech, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Blacksburg, VA
5
2
Current affiliation: The American Cleaning Institute, Washington, DC
6
3
Current affiliation: Virginia Tech, Department of Population Health Sciences, Blacksburg, VA
7
4
Legionella Risk Management, Chalfont, PA
8
*Corresponding author: Marc A. Edwards, e:
[email protected], ph: 540-231-7236; William J.
9
Rhoads, e:
[email protected], ph: 417-437-2550
10
Abstract
11
After the Federal emergency in Flint, MI was declared in early 2016 in response to elevated lead-
12
in-water and incidence of Legionnaires’ disease, concerns arose that contaminants in residential
13
water heaters could continue to contribute to poor quality tap water. Here, a comprehensive field
14
survey of residential water heaters (n=30) and associated water quality was conducted and the
15
subsequent effects of an aggressive manual water heater clean-out was determined, including
16
draining the tank and removing sediments via brushing and flushing. Before cleaning, inorganics
17
accumulated in the tank sediments did not serve as a source of metals measured at hot water
18
outlets. After cleaning, hardness- (calcium, magnesium, silica) and corrosion-associated
19
inorganics (lead, iron, copper, aluminum, zinc) decreased by 64% in samples from sediment
20
cleanout drain valves. Culturable L. pneumophila was only detected in 1 home (3.3%) prior to
21
cleaning and 2 homes (6.7%) after cleaning, thus quantitative polymerase chain reaction was
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 22
used to quantify potential effects on unculturable strains despite the limitation of detecting live
23
and dead cells. After the cleaning protocol, Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene numbers
24
decreased or remained non-detectable in 83% and 98% of samples, respectively. Homes with
25
less than 0.4 mg/L influent free chlorine tended to have quantifiable Legionella spp. gene
26
numbers in water entering the home and had elevated L. pneumophila and Legionella spp. gene
27
numbers throughout the home plumbing. Also, Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene
28
numbers were highest for water heaters set at or below ~42 °C and significantly decreased >51
29
°C, consistent with the organism’s preferred temperature range. Examination of the only home
30
that had culturable L. pneumophila both before and after the cleaning protocol revealed that the
31
organism was culturable from several sample locations throughout the home, including in water
32
representative of the water main. Notably, the home was located in close proximity to McLaren
33
Hospital, where an outbreak of Legionnaires disease was reported, and the water heater had a
34
setpoint within the Legionella growth range of 44.2 °C. Considering that other factors were
35
more strongly associated with Legionella occurrence and water heater sediment was not
36
detectably mobilizing to tap water, it was concluded that water heater cleaning had some
37
benefits, but was not an overarching factor contributing to possible human health risks.
38
Keywords: Flint, MI; Legionella, water heater, sediment, flushing, risk factors
39
1. Introduction
40
After switching from Lake Huron to the Flint River as the drinking water source in April 2014,
41
widespread distribution system water quality problems occurred in Flint, MI, ultimately leading
42
to a Federal Emergency declaration (Edwards et al., 2015; Rose, 2015; Masten et al., 2016;
43
FEMA, 2016). Citywide lead-in-water contamination and elevated lead in children’s blood
44
(Pieper et al., 2017; Pieper et al., 2018; Hanna-Attisha et al., 2016) prompted a switch back to 2
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 45
Lake Huron source water purchased from Detroit in October 2015. In January 2016, authorities
46
announced that outbreaks of Legionnaires’ disease had occurred in summers of 2014 and 2015.
47
Although the switch back to the Lake Huron water source in October 2015 reinstated corrosion
48
control and improved disinfectant residuals, there was lingering concern about persistent public
49
health threats.
50
All available data collected in early 2016 demonstrated relatively low levels of L. pneumophila
51
in small single-story buildings (Schwake et al., 2016; Rhoads et al., 2017a; FACHEP, 2016 as
52
cited in Edwards, 2018), suggesting that L. pneumophila occurrence and Legionnaires’ disease
53
incidence were primarily associated with large buildings. However, the State of Michigan and
54
the Federal Emergency Management Agency were concerned about possible high levels of
55
Legionella bacteria in home water systems, especially due to the high rates of water main breaks
56
and red water from 2014-2016. Nationally, it is believed that 96% of reported Legionnaires’
57
disease is not associated with outbreaks, with the origin of 64% of reported cases never reliably
58
being identified (Hicks et al., 2011; Shah et al., 2018). Residential plumbing systems are a
59
potential source of unidentified Legionnaires’ disease (Stout et al., 1987; Stout et al., 1992;
60
Pedro-Botet et al., 2002; Straus et al., 1996). Byrne et al. (2018) detected L. pneumophila
61
serogroup 6 strains in 12% of Flint homes (n=130) in late 2016, which differed from serogroup 1
62
clinical strains detected by the urine antigen test. All available clinical isolates were also found to
63
belong to serogroup 1, while isolates recovered from tap water in early 2016 were found to
64
belong to serogroup 1 or serogroup 6 (Garner et al., 2019), but of a different sequence type of
65
serogroup 6 than that reported by Byrne et al. (2018).
66
Following the Federal Emergency declaration in Flint, there was concern that Legionella could
67
have colonized water heater sediments during the water crisis, creating a long-term reservoir for 3
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 68
Legionella. Sediments are known to react with disinfectants and reduce their efficacy, while also
69
providing nutrients, shelter, and surface area for attached microbial growth, including for
70
Legionella (Lu et al., 2015; Qin et al., 2017). Sediments also decrease heat transfer and energy
71
efficiency (Weingarten, 1992). After the Flint Water Crisis, there were also general concerns that
72
accumulation of iron and lead from water main breaks and corrosion, might increase disinfectant
73
loss, microbial growth, and lead exposure, although hot water is not considered by EPA to be
74
potable water used for consumption (drinking or cooking).
75
Current recommendations for water heater cleanout, including flushing, vacuuming, and/or
76
dissolving sediments, are designed to remove hardness scale (Weingarten, 1992; Widder and
77
Baechler 2013). Water heater flushing protocols were developed following the Elk River 4-
78
Methylcyclohexanemethanol (MCHM) spill. However, the protocols were not rigorously
79
designed, validated, or verified in the field and there are concerns that flushing might have even
80
increased consumer exposure to MCHM (Omur-Ozbek et al., 2016). Eventually, science-based
81
recommendations were developed (Casteloes et al., 2015; Hawes et al., 2017; Ragain et al.,
82
2019) for the water soluble chemicals of concern, but they were not designed for removal of
83
contaminants that settled or deposited in plumbing.
84
In surveying the occurrence of Legionella, it is also important to evaluate all relevant factors that
85
could contribute to its proliferation. In particular, water heater set point has been identified as a
86
critical parameter for Legionella colonization of residential plumbing systems, with settings less
87
than 49 °C (120 °F) facilitating Legionella growth in the storage tanks (Lee et al., 2010). While
88
Michigan code allows residential water heater temperature settings up to 60 °C (140 °F), default
89
or resident-preferred temperatures are typically lower due to a desire to decrease energy demand,
90
reduce scaling, and prevent scalding. Gas heaters tend to have lower prevalence of Legionella 4
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 91
than electric heaters, likely due to heating from the tank bottom as opposed to side mounted
92
electrical elements (resistors) that create stratification (Alary and Joly, 1991; Dufresne et al.,
93
2011). In addition, while free chlorine levels in the distribution system had improved markedly
94
by summer 2016 relative to during the period the city was using the Flint River water (Rhoads et
95
al., 2017), residents were using little water due to high water bills, readily available bottled
96
water, and fears about the safety of bath water (Roy and Edwards, 2019). There was also concern
97
that the improved disinfectant residuals were not being consistently delivered to the residential
98
plumbing due to low water use.
99
Here we evaluated the hypothesis that a thorough water heater sediment cleaning event would
100
improve water quality at hot water outlets by reducing inorganic contamination, disinfectant
101
demand, and Legionella proliferation and release. Herein we conducted a comprehensive field
102
sampling campaign during the Flint, MI Federal Emergency response, deploying a rigorous
103
water heater sediment cleaning protocol at 30 single-family Flint residences located near the
104
epicenter of the reported Legionnaires’ disease outbreaks, in a portion of the distribution system
105
with high water age near McLaren Hospital (MDHHS, 2018). The goal was to provide insight
106
into the potential for water heater flushing to reduce risk of exposure to Legionella and other
107
water contaminants following major corrosion or other massive contamination events.
108
2. Methods
109
2.1 Sample Collection
110
Two sampling campaigns were conducted in July 2016, including 30 homes near the two
111
hospitals in Flint, MI where the majority of the Legionnaires’ disease cases and highest water
112
ages wer reported. Six samples were collected from each home before and 5-6 days after
5
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 113
performing the water heater cleaning protocol. Three of the samples were stagnant first draws
114
from the (1) cold kitchen outlet, (2) hot kitchen outlet, and (3) shower head or bathtub spout
115
sample of mixed hot and cold water. Further, samples were collected from the (4) kitchen outlet
116
flushed hot water after a stable hot water temperature was reached, (5) water heater drain valve,
117
and (6) an outside hose bib or outlet nearest to the point-of-entry to the home after 5-minutes of
118
maximum flow rate flushing. The last sample was intended to be representative of influent water
119
to the house from the main distribution system.
120
The four stagnant samples were collected in two sequential 1 L bottles for biological and
121
inorganic chemical analysis, respectively. The first 1 L sterile polypropylene sample bottle was
122
pre-dosed with 24 mg of sodium thiosulfate to remove disinfectant residual and, after mixing,
123
250 mL was aliquoted for culture into a sterile polypropylene bottle, while the remainder was
124
used for DNA extraction (Appendix A). The second 1 L sample from the outlet was collected in
125
an acid-washed high-density polyethylene bottle and temperature, free chlorine, total chlorine,
126
and pH were measured in the field. A portion of the sample was filtered in the field with a 0.45
127
µm pore size syringe filter (Whatman), where inorganics in the filtrate were operationally
128
defined as “soluble”. The remainder of the sample was acid digested to determine total inorganic
129
content. For the hot flushed samples, two consecutive 1 L samples were collected and processed
130
for biological and chemical analysis, as described above, except that an additional 250 mL
131
sample was also collected directly from the outlet into a polypropylene bottle dosed with 6 mg
132
sodium thiosulfate for culture. The sampling procedure for cold flushed water was identical to
133
that of the hot flushed samples, except 2 L bottles dosed with 48 mg sodium thiosulfate were
134
collected for molecular analysis to increase the mass of DNA in filter-concentrated extracts from
135
cold water mains, which tend to have less biomass. Samples for culture were shipped overnight
6
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 136
at ambient temperature while molecular samples were shipped overnight on ice. All culture and
137
molecular samples were processed within 30 hours of collection.
138
2.2 Water heater flushing protocol
139
The water heater cleaning procedure had three progressive “levels” of flushing. First, water was
140
repeatedly flushed from the bottom drain valve of the tank until it consistently ran clear. Second,
141
the water heater was drained and sediments were repeatedly scoured using gravity and
142
pressurized flow sprayed into the drained heater via the cold-water influent dip tube. Third, the
143
drain valves were completely removed and the interior of the tank was scrubbed with a coarse
144
brush to loosen sediments followed by more pressurized scouring with cold water until water
145
from the tank ran clear. The heaters were then re-filled with water and outlets flushed to re-
146
pressurize the system.
147
Meta data about the system and the home (size, age, primary plumbing material) were collected
148
onsite.
149
2.3 Sample analysis
150
Temperature and pH were measured using an Orion 100 Series pH meter calibrated with a three-
151
point calibration curve with automatic temperature correction. Free and total chlorine were
152
quantified using a hand-held HACH (Loveland, CO) pocket colorimeter using Standard Method
153
4500-Cl. The remaining sample was transported to Virginia Tech and acidified with 2% nitric
154
acid (or hydroxylamine, for samples with a large amount of visible iron sediment) for
155
quantification of inorganics by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) using
156
Standard Method 3125B (APHA, AWWA, WEF, 1998). A total of 28 inorganics are included in
157
the ICP-MS suite (limits of quantification are indicated in Appendix B). 7
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 158
2.4 Culture methods
159
Water samples were filter concentrated ~50X using a 0.22 µm pore size mixed cellulose ester
160
membrane filter, resuspended in the original unconcentrated sample, and plated onto buffered
161
charcoal yeast extract (BCYE) media with 0.4 g/L L-cysteine, 3 g/L ammonium-free glycine,
162
80,000 units/L Polymyxin B sulfate, 0.001 g/L vancomycin, and 0.08 g/L cycloheximide. A
163
matrix of sample treatments, including heat incubation at 50 °C (122 °F) for 30 minutes as well
164
as 1:10 and 1:100 dilutions, were used to increase Legionella culturability. Potential Legionella
165
isolates were culture confirmed on BCYE media with and without 0.4 g/L of L-cysteine, and
166
then t-streaked, suspended in 50 µL of molecular grade water, frozen at -20 °C (-4 °F) overnight,
167
heated to 90 °C (194 °F) on a heat block to lyse cells, pelleted using a microcentrifuge, and the
168
supernatant used directly in polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for isolate confirmation.
169
2.5 Molecular methods
170
Isolates were confirmed using previously published Legionella spp. (23S rRNA), L. pneumophila
171
(mip), L. pneumophila serogroup 1 (wzm), and monoclonal antibody group two (MAb2) positive
172
L. pneumophila serogroup 1 specific primers (lag-1; Merault et al., 2011; Wullings et al., 2011;
173
Kozak et al., 2009; Appendix C). Positive controls included L. pneumophila strain 130b,
174
acquired from the Centers for Disease Control. Negative controls included a non-template
175
control of molecular grade purity water and an unknown environmental bacterial isolate that
176
readily grew on L-cysteine negative BCYE agar plates. Each PCR reaction was analyzed in
177
triplicate and product size was confirmed using gel electrophoresis with low-mass ladder
178
quantification on a 1.2% agarose gel.
8
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 179
Environmental DNA was extracted from filter concentrated (as before) samples using a
180
commercially-available DNA extraction kit (FastDNA Spin Kit, MP Biomedicals). Legionella
181
spp. (23S rRNA) and L. pneumophila (mip) were enumerated by quantitative PCR (qPCR) using
182
previously published methods (Nazarian et al., 2008; Wang et al., 2012). Though qPCR detects
183
and quantifies both live and dead cells, causing potential false positive results, relative
184
comparisons between levels occurring at the point of entry to a home and at individual outlets
185
can be used as an indicator for potential regrowth (e.g., Rhoads et al., 2016). Thus, qPCR was
186
applied to make relative rather than absolute comparisons. Briefly, a dilution curve performed on
187
a subset of sample types revealed that a 1:10 dilution was adequate to minimize qPCR reaction
188
inhibition. For each qPCR run, serially-diluted standards prepared from M13 PCR primer-
189
extracted clone plasmids, a non-template control, and a spike and recovery on environmental
190
samples to confirm absence of inhibition on a subset of samples were run in triplicate wells. The
191
quantification limit was set at 50-100 gene copies/reaction based on the lowest standard DNA
192
template that consistently appeared with a standard curve efficiency of greater than 80% and R2
193
greater than 0.98. Any sample that had two out of three wells appear above the quantification
194
limit was scored as quantifiable, while any sample that appeared to be inhibited was re-analyzed.
195
Otherwise, results were scored as non-detectable and entered as 0 gc/mL or below the
196
quantification limit (BQL) and entered as half of the quantification limit (25 gc/mL) for
197
statistical analyses, as appropriate. The log(enumeration +1) is reported. Samples for 3 homes
198
were inadvertently discarded before analysis and thus only samples from 27 homes were
199
included in the DNA analysis portion of this study.
200
2.6 Data analysis and statistics
9
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 201
Plots and statistical tests were constructed in RStudio (R version 3.2.0) and detailed as
202
appropriate in the text.
203
3. Results and Discussion
204
3.1 Qualitative notes on cleaning protocol
205
For new heaters (<1 year old) or a few heaters that had been flushed regularly by the homeowner
206
(n =3), only 30-45 minutes was required to perform the entire cleaning protocol and achieve
207
clear flushed water. However, in the typical case (n=21), the procedure required between 90-120
208
minutes before the water from the tank ran clear of sediment. For worst-case heaters (n = 6),
209
clear water was never achieved and flushing was discontinued at 2 hours.
210
During the second week of sampling, after the heaters had already been cleaned once, we
211
selected two heaters that required typical effort to clean during the first week of sampling (one
212
tank >6 and one <6 years old) and two heaters that had been identified as worst case for further
213
testing. For these heatrs, we repeated a flushing protocol that included draining the tank and
214
scouring the sediment with pressurized water twice. The two heaters that had been relatively
215
easy to clean remained clear during the follow-up flushing (Figure 1A and B). However, both
216
heaters that had been difficult to clean still had noticeable particulates running from the tank
217
(Figure 1C – red iron corrosion byproduct; Figure 1D – white particulates). The sediment
218
removed during the follow-up flushing in Figure 1C did not settle in a graduated cylinder over a
219
5-minute period, unlike the sediment collected from the initial procedure at this home (Figure
220
1E), suggesting that sediments removed during the initial cleaning were larger particulates.
221
3.2 Water tank sediment quantity and composition
10
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 222
The cleaning protocol decreased the amount of accumulated sediments released from the water
223
heater drain valve. The sum of all inorganic constituents measured by ICP-MS were used as a
224
measure of total inorganic mass in samples. Cold distribution system water (collected at the hose
225
bib after 5 minutes of flushing) is representative of soluble inorganics levels of 42.8-49.9±2
226
mg/L both before and after the cleaning protocol was performed. Particulate inorganics coming
227
from water heater drain valves were quantified by subtracting total concentrations of each
228
inorganic measured in flushed cold water from the water heater drain valve samples at each
229
home to account for inorganics in the cold influent water to each home. Before the first cleaning,
230
the water heater drain valve samples contributed 23.8 mg/L excess inorganics on average (~54%
231
higher than the level dissolved in distribution system water; with high standard deviation 79.0
232
mg/L). In the follow-up sample after the water heater cleaning protocol, the total excess mass
233
released from the water heater tank sediment was 8.6 mg/L on average (~19% higher than
234
distribution system water; with standard deviation 32.9 mg/L), reflecting lowered concentrations
235
of scoured particulates after cleaning (Table D1; Figure 2). Thus, the total mass of particulate
236
inorganics released decreased by 64%, or an average of 15.2 mg/L, after the cleaning was
237
performed (paired Wilcox Test p-value=0.00086, n=30; Table D1; Figure D1).
238
The water heater sediment was found to consist of a combination of hardness-associated
239
components (magnesium, silica, calcium) and metal corrosion-related solids (magnesium,
240
aluminum, phosphorus, iron, copper, zinc, lead) (Figure 3). These constituents are associated
241
with precipitates due to heating of the water (calcium), corrosion of water heater components
242
(sacrificial magnesium or aluminum anode rod), and precipitated or mobilized corrosion scale
243
from iron water mains, service line, or premise plumbing (phosphorus, iron, lead). Before the
244
cleaning, calcium, aluminum, phosphorus, and iron accounted for 70.0% of the particulate
11
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 245
inorganics on average (range: 3.6-97.7%; median: 79.7%). The mass of all particulates decreased
246
significantly after the cleaning protocol (paired Wilcox Test, p-value = 1.32×10-5-0.049, n=30).
247
There was no correlation between water heater age (which ranged from <1 to >10 years old) and
248
any particulate inorganics released before or after the cleaning (Spearman Rank Correlation, p-
249
value=0.066-0.18, n =30), with the exception of calcium (rho=0.57, p-value=0.0049, n=30;
250
Appendix E). Primary home plumbing material did not impact the total particulate inorganics,
251
iron, or copper released from the drain valves before or after the cleaning (Kruskal-Wallis Test,
252
p-value=0.076-0.86, Table F1-F3). However, there was more zinc particulate released in homes
253
with galvanized plumbing before the water heater cleaning was performed (Dunn Test with
254
Bonferroni posthoc correction, p-value=0.020), but not after the cleaning protocol (p-
255
value=0.94). Total zinc and iron concentrations were significantly correlated in stagnant cold and
256
all hot water samples (Spearman Rank correlation, p-values=5×10-8-0.008; Table G1), but not in
257
flushed cold water representative of the distribution system. This suggests that a significant
258
source of the accumulated sediments in these homes was due to corrosion of the galvanized
259
plumbing.
260
3.3 Impact of water tank sediment on inorganics at hot outlets
261
The only constituents higher in hot stagnant or flushed water samples versus cold water samples
262
before the cleaning were magnesium and aluminum (Mg, Kruskal Wallis, p-values=0.0083-
263
0.0133; Al p-value=0.0007; Table G3), which is expected due to their presence in water heater
264
anodes. The absolute elevation in aluminum (52% increase, or 56 ppb higher relative to 108 ppb
265
in cold distributed water) and magnesium (<3% increase, or 200 ppb higher relative 7,890 ppb in
266
cold distributed water on average) in the hot water lines was relatively low. Only 4% of hot
267
stagnant and 9% of hot flushed samples exceeded the 15 ppb action level for lead, which is in the 12
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 268
range of the 3-9% of cold water samples (Table G2). Although 69% of drain valve samples
269
exceeded 15 ppb, this is not unexpected given that the action level does not apply to hot water,
270
especially drain valves, because it is not meant for human consumption.
271
3.4 Water quality parameters
272
Temperature and chlorine from water main samples were not significantly different before and
273
after the cleaning protocol. Median free chlorine residuals delivered to homes were consistent at
274
0.59-0.60 mg/L during the study (Table 1). Once in the home plumbing, the chlorine residual
275
decayed to varying degrees and levels were slightly higher (0.01-0.07 mg/L, comparing medians
276
before/after cleaning) after the cleaning. This was likely due to flushing (increased water use and
277
high velocity) associated with the cleaning protocol and variable stagnation times, which were
278
not assessed in this study. Chlorine was routinely detected in cold stagnant samples (median 0.41
279
and 0.50 mg/L, before and after the cleaning, respectively), but was lower in hot water samples,
280
as expected, due to the water residence time in the water heater storage tank and faster chlorine
281
decay at higher temperature (median 0.01-0.20 mg/L across all hot water samples). Water heater
282
temperature set point, quantified by the hot flushed water temperature, ranged from 33.4 – 67.4
283
°C (92.1-153.3 °F; median 53.3 °C (127.9 °F); Table 2).
284
3.5 Culturable Legionella pneumophila
285
Culturable L. pneumophila was detected in only two homes sampled in this study (6.6%). Before
286
the cleaning protocol, one home tested positive for culturable L. pneumophila in the flushed hot
287
water, the water heater drain valve, and even the cold flushed water sample thought to be
288
representative of the distribution system. After the cleaning, this same home still yielded
289
culturable L. pneumophila in all the stagnant samples collected from distal locations (cold and
13
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 290
hot water at the kitchen outlet and at the showerhead). Another home was found to have
291
culturable L. pneumophila in the hot stagnant sample only; interestingly, this was after the
292
cleaning. All isolates identified in this study were MAb2-positive serogroup 1 strains (i.e.,
293
positive for lag-1 and wzm genes by PCR) and classified as Sequence Type 192 via whole-
294
genome sequencing described elsewhere (Garner et al., 2019).
295
The home that was positive both before and after the cleaning was re-sampled in August 2016
296
(Garner et al., 2019). In this follow up sampling, only the stagnant shower sample was positive
297
and the isolate was again identified as a Mab2-positive L. pneumophila serogroup 1 strain by
298
PCR, but was classified as Sequence Type 1 instead of 192 (Garner et al., 2019). There is
299
precedence for multiple sequence types of L. pneumophila being identified at the same location
300
(Bedard et al., 2019). Notably, the August 2016 Sequence Type 1 isolate is the same sequence
301
type identified in 3 (of 10) Legionnaires’ disease clinical isolates collected from 2015 examined
302
by Garner et al. (2019) and differed from one clinical isolate by only 38 SNPs via single
303
nucleotide polymorphism analysis. This was the highest similarity of any environmental isolate
304
compared to clinical isolates examined by Garner et al. (2019).
305
The one home with culturable L. pneumophila both before and after the cleaning, including in
306
the sample representative of water entering the home, was located in close geographical
307
proximity to McLaren Hospital (~0.3 miles direct sight; 1.6-1.9 miles by road), which was
308
associated with 51 of the 90 Legionnaires’ disease cases that occurred during 2014-2015
309
(MDHHS, 2018). It also had several risk factors that deviated somewhat from other homes in
310
this study. The free chlorine levels entering the home (0.36 ppm as Cl2) was on the lower end of
311
that entering other homes (median = 0.59-0.60 mg/L). This home was also located towards the
312
end of an hydraulically isolated neighborhood within a high water age region of the Flint 14
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 313
distribution system (estimated to be 9 or more days; Arcadis, 2018), which likely contributed to
314
lower residuals and potentially the isolate detected in water entering the home. The hot water set
315
point (44.2 °C) was more than 9 °C below the average water heater temperatures in this study
316
and in the high risk range for Legionella growth (Yee & Wadowsky et al., 1982). Several
317
samples had elevated iron levels (>250 µg/L) compared to other homes (median=41.3-50.9 µg/L
318
before/after cleaning). In addition, our team found that this water heater was one of the three that
319
were very difficult to clean. While all of these factors, individually or in combination, could
320
increase the likelihood of Legionella detection, there were at least some other homes that had
321
greater individual risk factors, but which did not yield culturable Legionella or elevated levels of
322
Legionella spp. or L. pneumophila gene numbers, which are presented in section 3.6.
323
The other home that had culturable Legionella, and only in the hot stagnant sample after
324
cleaning, had no significant risk factors given the high water temperature set point (>52 °C) and
325
influent free chlorine concentrations (0.6-0.71 ppm as Cl2 before/after cleaning). This home also
326
had relatively low iron levels (only one sample slightly elevated at 88 µg/L and spikes of iron did
327
not occur as in the other home with culturable L. pneumophila). However, the water heater was
328
again one of three heaters judged very difficult to clean. Even after six attempts to clean the
329
heater, the water was still turbid. In sum, 2 of 6 of homes with difficult to clean heaters also
330
happened to yield culturable L. pneumophila.
331
The reported positivity rates for culturable L. pneumophila serogroup 1 of 1.8% of samples (n=7
332
of 372) and 6.7% of homes (n=2 of 30) are comparable to some prior reports. Byrne et al. (2018)
333
detected L. pneumophila serogroup 1 in only one of 130 homes (0.7%) in Flint from September-
334
October 2016. However, Byrne et al. identified L. pneumophila serogroup 6 in 12% of residences
335
(n=130) sampled. In general, L. pneumophila serogroup 1 is thought to be the dominant agent of 15
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 336
Legionnaires’ disease in the US, as observed in a survey of sputum cultures collected from 508
337
patients (L. pneumophila serogroup 1 was identified in 84.2% sputum cultures; Yu et al., 2002).
338
Further, MAb2 is considered to be a strong indicator of virulence, e.g., in on study it was
339
detected in 75% of 100 clinical isolates and only 8% of 50 environmental isolates (Kozak et al.,
340
2009). Still, it must be acknowledged that clinical diagnostics of Legionnaires’ disease is
341
inherently biased towards serogroup 1 strains, both because of the urine antigen test and non-
342
pneumophila species tend to be more difficult to isolate (Mercante and Winchell, 2015; Lee et
343
al., 1993; Lucas et al., 2011).
344
Given that Flint had major Legionnaire’s disease outbreaks in 2014 and 2015 that were largely
345
linked to a hospital building (MDHHS, 2018), the fact that this study and Byrne et al. (2018)
346
independently report very low rates of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 in homes sampled in 2016,
347
and a third study reported non-detection in household water samples in late 2015 (Rhoads et al.,
348
2017), is somewhat of a mystery because the residential water systems in Flint had multiple risk
349
factors for colonization by Legionella (Table 3). In particular, 60% of homes in this study had
350
water heater temperature settings lower than the recommended levels to inhibit Legionella
351
growth and one quarter of home water heater temperature settings were at very high-risk
352
temperatures of 33.4-46.3° C (92-115° F). We speculate that one reason incidence of Legionella
353
was so low is because the majority of water heaters (86%) sampled in this study were gas, even
354
though efforts were made to identify and sample the higher risk electric water heaters (Alary and
355
Joly, 1991).
356
3.6 Molecular markers for Legionella
357
3.6.1 Impact of the cleaning protocol
16
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 358
The proportion of samples with detectable Legionella gene copies (i.e., positivity) decreased
359
after the water heater tank cleaning. Legionella spp. positivity decreased from 73% (before) to
360
40% (after) and L. pneumophila positivity decreased from 23% to 4% (Table 4). Legionella spp.
361
positivity decreased across all sample types after the cleaning protocol except cold stagnant
362
samples (Table 4; McNemar Test p-value = <0.0001-0.023). The change in L. pneumophila
363
positivity was less frequently significant among individual sample types, likely due to the low
364
number of positive samples both before and after the cleaning protocol. Samples that were
365
negative before the cleaning tended to remain negative after the cleaning. Overall, only 5
366
samples that were negative for Legionella spp. before the cleaning were positive after the
367
cleaning, and only 1 sample negative before cleaning was positive afterwards for L. pneumophila
368
(Table H1).
369
3.6.2 Trends in Legionella gene marker occurrence
370
Though there were low levels of Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene copy numbers in
371
samples overall (Table H2-H4; Figure H1 and H2), influent conditions appeared to be an
372
important factor for detecting sporadically high levels in individual homes. For instance, there
373
were 20 homes (nbefore=12; nafter=8) with quantifiable levels of Legionella spp. in the cold flushed
374
water sample representative of water entering the home (i.e., 5 minutes flushing at hose bib or
375
nearest outlet to the point of entry). These homes had significantly more Legionella spp. and L.
376
pneumophila DNA within the home plumbing compared to homes without quantifiable
377
Legionella spp. DNA in water entering the home (Kruskal Test, p-value=1.68×10-16 and
378
3.98×10-8, respectively; Figure 4 A & B). However, Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene
379
copies did not increase within these homes relative to the cold water entering the home (Figure 4
380
A & B). 17
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 381
In addition, while there was no significant correlation between free chlorine and overall
382
Legionella spp. or L. pneumophila gene copy numbers (Spearman rank p-value=0.65-0.76;
383
Figure H3), or even amongst the different types of samples (p-value=0.15-0.85), homes with
384
influent free chlorine <0.4 mg/L (n=11) contained significantly higher Legionella spp. (but not L.
385
pneumophila) copy numbers than homes that had influent free chlorine >0.4 mg/L (Kruskal Test,
386
p-value 1.21×10-6 and 0.68, respectively; Figure 4 C & D). Of the eight homes with median
387
Legionella spp. gene copy numbers from all samples above the quantification limit, six of them
388
had free chlorine levels less than 0.4 mg/L. The home with culturable L. pneumophila both
389
before and after the cleaning had low influent free chlorine (0.24-0.36 mg/L). This home also
390
had the highest levels of Legionella gene markers, on average, an order of magnitude more
391
Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene copies than the 90th percentile of all samples (104.1 vs
392
103.2 gc/mL and 102.6 vs below the quantification limit of ~101.4 gc/mL, respectively).
393
It is widely recognized that lower chlorine residuals at the point of entry to buildings can be a
394
risk factor for Legionella colonization (e.g., Strauss et al., 1996), but a target disinfectant residual
395
for controlling Legionella in homes has not been specified. There is no work in residential water
396
heaters specifically, or residential hot water systems in general, that specifies a residual to be
397
achieved and maintained to inhibit Legionella colonization. The American Society of Heating,
398
Refrigeration, and Air-conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) once proposed a minimum cold water
399
influent chlorine residual of 0.5 mg/L is desirable in a public draft version of ASHRAE 188
400
(ASHRAE, 2011), but this was not included in the final version likely because it was based on
401
anecdotal evidence and was unclear how this would be enforced (Rhoads et al., 2012). Though
402
the proposed ASHRAE target influent chlorine concentration appears consistent with this work,
403
it still is not clear how this would translate to large building plumbing systems with more
18
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 404
complicated plumbing and higher water retention time. However, a recent survey of main water
405
distribution systems reported that 69.2% of L. pneumophila culture-positive samples (only 13 of
406
317 total samples were positive) also had free chlorine residuals <0.5 mg/L (LeChevallier, 2019),
407
which is consistent with the findings of this study.
408
Elevated stored hot water temperatures were associated with decreased positivity of Legionella
409
spp. and L. pneumophila gene copy numbers in hot water samples. Samples were binned into
410
four broad categories based impacts of temperature on Legionella growth predicted based on a
411
literature survey: <32 °C (survival or moderate growth up to 32 °C; <89.6 °F), ≥32 °C and <42
412
°C (optimal growth range; ≥89.6-107.6 °F), ≥42 °C and <51 °C (moderate growth or survival;
413
≥107.6-123.8 °F), and ≥51 °C (death; ≥123.8 °F). Though not statistically significant, Legionella
414
spp. and L. pneumophila levels trended higher with increasing temperatures up to approximately
415
42 °C (107.6 °F; Figure 5). Above 42 °C (107.6 °F), quantifiable Legionella spp. (Spearman
416
Rank, p42-51=0.017; p>51=0.045) and L. pneumophila (p>51=0.039) significantly decreased as
417
temperature increased. Samples with temperatures ≥51 °C (≥123.8 °F) also had significantly less
418
Legionella spp. gene copies than either <32 °C or 32-42 °C (<89.6 °F or 89.6-107.6 °F; Dunn
419
Test with Bonferroni correction, p-value = 0.0002 and 0.0031, respectively). An identical result
420
showing lower levels of Legionella spp. gene copy numbers >42 °C (>107.6 °F) was reported in
421
an Australian survey of 68 homes (Hayes-Phillips et al., 2019).
422
There were no significant differences in Legionella spp. or L. pneumophila gene copy numbers
423
based on primary plumbing material (Kruskal-Wallis Test, p-value=0.51-0.91), nor were there
424
differences in categories of water heater ages (≤2, 2 to ≤5, 5 to ≤10, and >10 years old) (Kruskal-
425
Wallis Test, p-value=0.081-0.13). Among the inorganics analyzed, only the copper concentration
426
was a consistent and significant positive predictor of Legionella spp. gene concentration across 19
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 427
all
samples and
ordinary least
squares (OLS)
multiple linear regression
models
428
(ols_step_forward(), ols_step_backward(), ols_step_best_subset, p-value=0.0016). However, all
429
possible models were poor in predicting the variability of in Legionella spp. gene numbers
430
(Adjusted R2<0.05) and copper was not generally correlated with Legionella spp. gene numbers
431
(Spearman Rank Correlation, p-values by sample type ranged 0.06-0.29). This suggests that
432
levels of Legionella spp. gene copy numbers in the water collected may co-vary with elevated
433
copper and low chlorine residuals, which may simply serve as indicators for stagnation within
434
domestic plumbing drinking water systems. During stagnation, free chlorine can react with
435
cupric hydroxide solids on copper pipe walls (Nguyen et al., 2011), rapidly eliminating the
436
disinfectant residual in stagnant building plumbing. Other researchers have sporadically
437
documented that inorganic or metal concentrations have played a role in Legionella building
438
colonization, including zinc and copper (e.g., Borella et al., 2004), but do not typically collect
439
enough information to evaluate if the incidence of these metals are simply co-factors during
440
stagnation.
441
4. Conclusions
442
The one-time cleanout of sediment accumulated in Flint, Michigan water heater tanks:
443
•
Reduced the amount of particulate inorganics released from the drain valve;
444
•
Had no major impact on the level of inorganics sampled at other outlets (kitchen, shower)
445
within homes, indicating that water heater sediments do not serve as a constant source
446
(i.e., sink) of inorganics at hot water point of use outlets; and
447
•
At least temporarily reduced the occurrence and levels of Legionella spp. and L.
448
pneumophila gene copy numbers, possibly due to scouring of particulate (sediment) and
449
biofilms by high velocity flushing of cold water from the distribution system associated 20
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 450
with the heater flushing protocol. However, the flushing protocol also introduced large
451
amounts of distribution system water to the home, which delivered free chlorine residual
452
and may have also contributed to the lower levels of gene copy numbers.
453 454
Quantifiable levels of Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila within homes: •
455
Co-occurred with free chlorine levels that were below 0.4 mg/L in flushed cold influent water to the home from the main distribution system;
456
•
Were negatively correlated with temperature when water temperature was >42 °C, and;
457
•
Co-occurred with quantifiable levels of Legionella spp. in flushed cold influent water.
458
Finally, the detection of culturable L. pneumophila serogroup 1 (sequence type 192) in flushed
459
cold influent water of one home in this study occurred in a part of the system with high water age
460
and relatively low chlorine residual, indicating distributed water can be a source of Legionella to
461
buildings. At-risk buildings, as defined by ASHRAE 188, should consider routine monitoring of
462
water quality at the point of entry as well as within the building plumbing.
463
5. Acknowledgments
464
We would like to thank the Flint residents that participated in this study. We would also like to
465
thank members of the Flint Water Study team for dedicating their time to conduct the sampling,
466
in particular: Pan Ji, Rebekah Martin, Laurel Strom ,Owen Strom, Ni Zhu, Kimberley Hughes,
467
Mariana Martinez, David Otto Schwake, Jeffrey Parks, Dongjuan Dai, Haniyyah Chapman,
468
Philip Smith, Ethan Edwards, Ailene Edwards, Connor Brown, and Kandance Donalson.
469
6. Funding
21
Rhoads et al., Residential Water Heater Cleaning and Legionella Occurrence 470
This work was funded by a grant from the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
471
(MDEQ). The author's views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of
472
the MDEQ.
473
7. Conflicts of Interest
474
Dr. Edwards has been subpoenaed as a fact witness in several criminal cases related to the Flint
475
Water Crisis. Otherwise, we have no conflicts to declare.
476
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Figure 1. Drain valve samples collected 4-6 days after water heater cleaning procedure occurred; Photographs (top view of 1-L graduated cylinder) were taken after draining the water heater and scouring one time with cold pressurized water for A) a gas heater <6 years old that was easy to clean, B) a gas heater >6 years old that was easy to clean, C) an electric heater >6 years old that was difficult to clean, D) an electric heater >6 years old that was difficult to clean, E) original cleaning of water heater sediments collected from same tank as C, fully settled during the first sampling but they remained suspended during the follow up sampling.
100%
Percentile
75%
50%
25%
Dist. Sys. Water Drain Valve Before Cleaning Drain Valve After Cleaning
0% 40
50 60 Total Inorganics (mg/L)
70
Figure 2. Cumulative distribution function (CDF) of the total mass of inorganics measured in the distribution system water and water heater drain valve samples before and after cleaning the water heaters. Total inorganics are defined as sum of all inorganic constituents measured by ICP-MS (Appendix B). The distribution system water samples from both before and after the cleaning are included in the CDF.
Figure 3. Particulate concentrations for the ten most abundant inorganic constituents measured in the water heater drain valve samples (n=30) (i.e., Particulate Mg = total Mg from drain valve – soluble Mg present in flushed water main sample). Boxplots represent the interquartile range (IQR), whiskers represent a deviation of ±1.5*IQR from the median, and outliers to those ranges are plotted as individual points. y-axis truncated for convenience (truncated high levels include: Mg 31.3 mg/L; Al 5.7, 8.1, 12.5, 21.3, 27.5, 27.6,133.8 mg/L; Si 10.9; P 6.9, 13.9, 14.0, 61.4; Ca 5.7, 5.9, 6.0, 8.8, 10.5, 29.0, 288.5; Fe 7.0, 8.5, 10.8, 14.7; Mn 21.2.
Table 1. Summary statistics for free chlorine levels (ppm as Cl2) in each sample (n=30 for each sample before and after cleaning)
Sample Cold Stagnant Hot Stagnant Shower Stagnant Hot Flush Drain Valve Cold Flushed
Avg 0.44 0.06 0.09 0.13 0.22 0.60
Chlorine (ppm as Cl2) Before Cleaning After Cleaning Min Max Median Avg Min Max 0.0 0.93 0.50 0.37 0.0 0.80 0.0 0.59 0.01 0.07 0.0 0.45 0.0 0.53 0.03 0.14 0.0 0.81 0.0 2.0 0.03 0.10 0.0 0.38 0.02 0.96 0.18 0.21 0.01 0.68 0.01 1.16 0.59 0.55 0.14 0.87
Median 0.41 0.04 0.10 0.08 0.20 0.6
Table 2. Summary statistics for temperature (°C) of each collected sample; data from before and after cleaning events is combined because there were no differences between the two sampling events (n = 30 for each sample, before and after cleaning). Sample Cold Stagnant Hot Stagnant Shower Stagnant Hot Flush Drain Valve Cold Flushed
Avg 21.2 35.4 43.1 52.6 43.4 17.9
Min 17.2 17.3 15.5 33.4 20.6 16.2
Max 26.9 55.2 64.0 67.4 58.3 21.2
Median 19.8 35.1 47.0 53.3 44.5 17.5
* Note: Temperature in stagnant samples was measureed from the second 1 L sample (see Appendix A); therefore, temperature in these samples is impacted by amount of time the outlet was stagnant prior to sampling and the size of the building plumbing system (in some systems, 2 L could potentially contain water from the water heater).
Table 3. Colonization factors in residential hot water systems identified by two seminal studies Risk factor Electric (vs oil or gas) heater
Condition in Flint Homes 17% of heaters (n=5 of 29)
Reference Alary and Joly, 1991; Straus et al., 1996; Dufresne et al., 2012
Lower water heater set point <46-48 °C highest risk
20-24% (n=6-7 of 29)
<54 °C moderate risk Heater Age >7.2 years
58% (n=17 of 29) 45% of heaters (n=11 of 24)a
Lee et al., 1988; Stout et al., 1992; Mathys et al., 2012 Alary and Joly Alary and Joly, 1991
Influent Cl2 <0.5 ppm
32% of Cold Flushed (n=19 of 60)b
ASHRAE, 2011c
a
Some water heater age data was not available. If not available, experienced plumbers assisting our team estimate the age based on manufacturing and installation practices (see Appendix E); bIncludes both before and after samples; c 0.5 mg/L as Cl2 was suggested in a draft version of ASHRAE 188, but was not included in the final published version.
Table 4. Number (n+) and percent (%) of samples positive for Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila by sample type. McNemar test pvalue for contingency tables are presented. P-value<0.05 (bold) indicates that the proportion of samples positive for Legionella spp. or L. pneumophila decreased after cleaning the water heaters. Legionella spp. Before Sample
Total n All Samples 162 Cold, Stagnant 27 Hot, Stagnant 27 Hot, Flushed 27 Shower/Bathtub 27 Water Heater 27 Hose Bib 27
n+
(%)
118 18 18 23 15 20 24
(73%) (67%) (67%) (85%) (56%) (74%) (89%)
After n+ 64 13 11 14 6 6 14
L. pneumophila McNemar
(%)
p-value
(40%) (48%) (41%) (52%) (22%) (22%) (52%)
3.5×10-11 0.131 0.023 0.016 0.016 0.002 0.004
Before n+ 38 6 6 7 6 6 7
After
(%)
n+
(23%) (22%) (22%) (26%) (22%) (22%) (26%)
6 1 2 1 1 1 0
McNemar
(%)
p-value
(4%) (4%) (-7%) (4%) (4%) (4%) (0%)
1.1×10-7 0.131 0.134 0.041 0.074 0.074 0.013
Figure 4. Legionella spp. and L. pneumophila gene copy numbers across all sample types (A & B) in homes with < limit of quantification (LOQ) versus >LOQ levels of Legionella spp. in the influent water (n<500=24; n>500=6) and (C & D) in homes with less than or greater than 0.4 mg/L Cl2 in the influent water (n<0.5=17, n>0.5=13). Boxplots represent the interquartile range (IQR), whiskers represent a deviation of ±1.5*IQR from the median, and outliers to those ranges are plotted as individual points.
Figure 5. Scatter plots of (A) Legionella spp. and (B) L. pneumophila gene copy numbers as a function of temperature by category: Survival or Moderate Growth (<32 °C), Optimal Growth (32-42 °C), Moderate Growth or Survival (42-51°C), and Death (>51 °C). Spearman correlation p-values are indicated for each temperature overall (and only considering samples with quantifiable levels of DNA are provided parenthetically). A LOESS local regression (blue line) was fit to quantifiable data with standard error (gray shading) to aid visual data interpretation.
• • • •
L. pneumophila culturability rates were low in Flint, MI homes in 2016 Removing sediment from water heaters decreased Legionella gene markers in some homes Influent chlorine <0.4 ppm was associated with Legionella gene markers in homes Water temperature was a key factor controlling levels of Legionella gene markers
Declaration of interests The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interest or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Dr. Edwards has been subpoenaed as a fact witness in several criminal cases related to the Flint Water Crisis. Otherwise, we have no conflicts to declare.