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Review

The Adequacy of Current Legionnaires’ Disease Diagnostic Practices in Capturing the Epidemiology of Clinically Relevant Legionella: A Scoping Review

1
Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, University of Manitoba, 745 Bannatyne Ave., Winnipeg, MB R3E 0J9, Canada
2
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Manitoba, 750 Bannatyne Ave., Winnipeg, MB R3A 1R9, Canada
3
Shared Health, Diagnostic Services, 1502-155 Carlton St, Winnipeg, MB R3C 3H8, Canada
4
Cadham Provincial Laboratory, Shared Health, 750 William Ave., Winnipeg, MB R3E 3J7, Canada
5
Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, 750 Bannatyne Ave., Winnipeg, MB R3E 0J9, Canada
6
School of Medicine, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Circular 1ª 70-01, Barrio Laureles, Medellín 050031, Colombia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Pathogens 2024, 13(10), 857; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens13100857
Submission received: 19 August 2024 / Revised: 13 September 2024 / Accepted: 25 September 2024 / Published: 1 October 2024
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Legionella and Waterborne Disease)

Abstract

:
Legionella is an underdiagnosed and underreported etiology of pneumonia. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 (LpSG1) is thought to be the most common pathogenic subgroup. This assumption is based on the frequent use of a urinary antigen test (UAT), only capable of diagnosing LpSG1. We aimed to explore the frequency of Legionella infections in individuals diagnosed with pneumonia and the performance of diagnostic methods for detecting Legionella infections. We conducted a scoping review to answer the following questions: (1) “Does nucleic acid testing (NAT) increase the detection of non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella compared to non-NAT?”; and (2) “Does being immunocompromised increase the frequency of pneumonia caused by non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella compared to non-immunocompromised individuals with Legionnaires’ disease (LD)?”. Articles reporting various diagnostic methods (both NAT and non-NAT) for pneumonia were extracted from several databases. Of the 3449 articles obtained, 31 were included in our review. The most common species were found to be L. pneumophila, L. longbeachae, and unidentified Legionella species appearing in 1.4%, 0.9%, and 0.6% of pneumonia cases. Nearly 50% of cases were caused by unspecified species or serogroups not detected by the standard UAT. NAT-based techniques were more likely to detect Legionella than non-NAT-based techniques. The identification and detection of Legionella and serogroups other than serogroup 1 is hampered by a lack of application of broader pan-Legionella or pan-serogroup diagnostics.

1. Introduction

Legionnaires’ disease (LD) is caused by various species of Legionella, a genus of intracellular bacteria primarily found in water and soil. LD refers to pneumonia caused by Legionella. Legionellosis refers to Legionella infections, regardless of the site of infection. Within this text, Legionellosis is used when the source of the information uses the same terminology. Clinical symptoms vary from a mild febrile illness to severe and life-threatening pneumonia [1]. Legionella is suspected to be underdiagnosed in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) due to non-specific presenting symptoms and signs, and thus there is an under-recognition by treating clinicians [2]. Pneumonia is commonly treated empirically without pathogen identification unless there is progressive clinical deterioration leading to further investigations [3]. Legionella are fastidious organisms that require special media for culture, and the sensitivity of culture techniques is low [4]. These limitations in LD detection and diagnostics have resulted in up to 90% of LD diagnoses being missed [5].
In 2022, the World Health Organization reported the overall mortality by Legionnaires’ disease as 5–10% and as high as 40–80% in immunosuppressed individuals [1]. The incidence of disease is estimated to be ten to fifteen cases per million per year in Europe, Australia, and the USA [1]. In 2019, the Public Health Agency of Canada stated that under 100 cases of LD were reported per year in Canada [6]. However, provincial data suggest a higher number of cases within Canada, with Ontario reporting over 100 cases per year from 2013 to 2022 [7]. Furthermore, LD cases have seen an increase across North America, as noted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the British Columbia CDC [8,9].
Diagnostic testing for Legionella is rarely performed in mild CAP in community or hospitalized individuals and is only undertaken in severely ill hospitalized patients once other avenues have been exhausted. However, despite guidelines recommending that patients requiring hospitalization for CAP be tested for Legionella among other pathogens that may not be responsive to empirical therapy, the narrow spectrum of applicability, the limitations of most Legionella diagnostics, and the previously low rate of testing often make this effort fruitless [3,10,11]. The CDC and the National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Disease (NCCID) recommend diagnostic testing for Legionella in outpatients failing antibiotic therapy, individuals requiring intensive care admission, immunocompromised individuals, individuals with recent travel history, or in the setting of a known Legionellosis outbreak [4,8,12]. In addition, the CDC recommends testing for Legionella in cases of healthcare-associated pneumonia, and the NCCID recommends testing when there have been recent changes in water quality [12,13]. A recent review indicated a 42% increase in LD in the 3 weeks following storms [14]. LD is a looming hazard with the continuing rise in tropical storm intensity due to climate change, increased susceptibility associated with growing numbers of immunocompromised individuals, and a global aging population [14,15,16]. Additionally, the shortening of winter and the increase in average winter temperatures extends periods of rain and warm weather, further contributing to the risk of LD [14,15,17,18,19].
Out of the 65 species of Legionella, only 25 are known to cause disease in humans [20]. L. pneumophila is generally considered to be the most common cause of LD, followed by L. longbeachae, which is the cause of around 50% of LD cases in Oceania [21,22,23]. All clinically relevant species of Legionella are primarily found in water except the soilborne L. longbeachae. Effective treatments for LD include fluoroquinolones and macrolides [24]. Empirical therapy for CAP frequently includes either a macrolide or fluoroquinolones; however, when LD is not suspected and not treated, such as in immunocompromised people or people living with HIV, the outcomes and prognosis are adversely affected [25,26].
A summary of the diagnostic methods of LD is provided in Table 1. In most countries, the BinaxNOW urinary antigen test (UAT) remains the primary diagnostic test, with a high sensitivity and quick turnaround time for only a single serogroup of L. pneumophila (serogroup 1) [12,13,27,28]. In general, culture is the gold standard but has low sensitivity, requires invasive procedures to obtain samples (bronchoalveolar lavage) or involves samples that are infrequently produced in the context of LD (sputum), and offers no speciation in Legionella [12,29,30,31].
The prevalence of Legionella, especially non-pneumophila and non-serogroup 1 pneumophila, is likely underreported due to infrequent sampling, the unavailability of diagnostic tools in medical facilities, difficulty collecting sputum, long turnaround times, and the fact that it is only studied in severe clinical presentations or an outbreak context [24,27,32]. In this scoping review, we aimed to describe (1) the incidence, prevalence, and frequency of Legionella infections in individuals diagnosed with pneumonia with and without immunocompromised conditions, (2) the distribution of Legionella species and serotypes among people diagnosed with Legionella, and (3) which diagnostic techniques were used in each study.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Type

We conducted a scoping review following the scoping review checklist to answer the following questions [33]:
  • Does nucleic acid testing (NAT) increase the detection of non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella compared to non-NAT?
  • Does immunocompromisation increase the frequency of pneumonia caused by non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella compared to non-immunocompromised individuals with LD?
The population, intervention/exposure, comparator, outcome, and timeframe (PICOT) table for our questions are shown below in Table 2.

2.2. Search Strategy

We created a search strategy following PRISMA guidelines and searched in the following databases between 22 December 2022, and 12 February 2023: PubMed, PubMed Central, Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials, Clinicaltrials.org, and LegionellaDB. The full review protocol can be found in the Supplementary Material labeled as Supplemental Materials S1. A timeframe was not included in the search. Our search queries, search strategies, and precise dates can be found in Supplementary Table S1. All searches were uploaded to Covidence [33], a web-based collaboration software platform that streamlines the production of systematic and other literature reviews [34].

2.3. Study Selection

We included studies that met all of the following criteria: (1) original research that reports data about the PICOT questions that can be used to calculate incidence, frequency, or prevalence of Legionella with a species or serogroup analysis; (2) comparative quantitation using multiple detection methods; (3) use of at least one NAT- and one non-NAT-based technique for diagnosis; (4) at least 5 cases of LD in the patient group. During the title and abstract screening, articles were included if there was an indication of clinical diagnosis of Legionella.
We excluded studies with the following criteria: (1) case reports or series of <5 patients; (2) studies missing serogroup or species analysis; (3) studies in which patients were only infected with L. pneumophila serogroup 1; (4) articles not available in English; (5) articles with no abstract; (6) articles examining environmental distribution; (7) ongoing trials; (8) studies not conducted on humans or using human samples; (9) non-pneumonic Legionellosis; (10) articles in which the diagnostic techniques are not reported.
Titles and abstracts were screened independently by two blinded reviewers using Covidence [34]. References that met all the inclusion criteria without exclusions were selected for full-text review and data extraction. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus or with a third reviewer where necessary.

2.4. Data Extraction

The following data were extracted from the included studies: (1) year of study; (2) country(ies) or continent where the study was conducted; (3) population under study; (4) sample size disaggregated by sex; (5) diagnostic techniques used; (6) brand of tests, if listed; (7) species or serogroups found; (8) immunosuppressive conditions; (9) comorbidities; (10) time of follow-up, if listed; (11) limitations, both recognized and unrecognized by original authors.

2.5. Data Synthesis

Descriptive analyses were conducted to report the frequency at which each serogroup or species was found clinically and the diagnostic testing used. Some studies were only eligible to describe the Legionella subgroup (i.e., species and/or serogroups) breakdown within a population, while other studies allowed for an analysis of the specific by-technique breakdown for each subgroup. Studies fulfilling the latter criterion were used to conduct an analysis on the testing positivity of different techniques. Furthermore, articles providing LD cases within a greater pneumonia context were subject to an analysis on their frequency within this context.

3. Results

Of the 3449 article citations identified, we included 279 unique studies for full-text review and 31 in the analysis (Figure 1). Many excluded articles were excluded for multiple reasons. However, we can only list one reason in Covidence.
Table 3 reports all the included articles, regions, populations studied, sample sizes, diagnostic test(s) used, and outcomes.
When looking strictly at studies reporting cases of pneumonia, regardless of pathogen identification, the majority of LD cases were found to be caused by unserogrouped L. pneumophila, followed by L. longbeachae and unidentified species of Legionella depending on the population included, with other identified species and serogroups being few and far between (Table 4 and Table 5). Relative to the total pneumonia cases, the most prevalent subgroups of Legionella are L. pneumophila, L. longbeachae, and unknown species of Legionella appearing in 1.4% (summed up across all serogroups), 0.895%, and 0.627% of the population, respectively (Table 4). However, a significant portion of these are due to unserogrouped L. pneumophila (1.140%) and unknown Legionella species (0.627%). For many subgroups, there is a wide range in their frequency of diagnosis.
Relative representation of subgroups relative to total reported LD cases is as follows: Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1, unserogrouped L. pneumophila, unspeciated Legionella, and L. longbeachae are the most common at 50.064%, 9.816%, 38.862%, and 0.482%, respectively (Table 5).
In studies involving national surveillance, the total population is reduced to either that of individuals diagnosed with pneumonia or LD, depending on the information provided in the study. Subgroups examined in only one eligible study have their frequencies marked with an asterisk (*) (Table 4 and Table 5).
Seven studies qualified for our technical analysis, which required a by-technique breakdown, including the reporting of all techniques performed on each sample instead of only listing the main technique used for diagnosis (Table 6).
Additionally, studies were unclear about whether testing using the UAT was attempted for initial diagnoses of cases later found to be compatible with non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella but not LpSG1. Where it would normally be expected to give a negative result, it is unclear if the UAT was used at all, as the studies did not report its use either way.

4. Discussion

Our review found that most LD cases are caused by an unidentified species or serogroup of L. pneumophila. The emphasis on using a UAT that strictly detects LpSG1 as an initial test likely results in a significant number of missed cases [32,62,63]. Typically, culture-positive diagnoses are not subject to speciation or serogrouping or the species could not be identified for other reasons [36]. We found that almost 50% of LD cases are still caused by an unspecified species or a serogroup not detected by the standard UAT (Table 5). In general, the detection of the respiratory pathogen causing CAP is very low. Jain et al. found that only 38% of individuals with CAP were positive for pathogen detection [64].
The continued belief that LD is almost exclusively caused by L. pneumophila SG1 and the accompanying diagnostic practices leads to further missed diagnoses and increasingly discordant epidemiological data. In addition, the broad diagnostic coverage of Legionella is crucial, as the disease has been reported to be similar in both manifestations and outcomes across subgroups [38,65,66]. LD diagnosis is very narrow in scope and species identification is often not involved, further reinforcing the small pool of clinically relevant Legionella. While the BinaxNOW Legionella UAT has a rapid turnaround time, it is strictly capable of detecting L. pneumophila serogroup 1. The RIBOTEST Legionella, another UAT, is used exclusively in Japan and can detect Legionella pneumophila serogroups 1–15 and several other species at a sensitivity comparable to BinaxNOW Legionella’s rate of detection for LPSG1 strains suspended in saline solutions [67]. The other first-line diagnostic is culture, which is hampered by low sensitivity, takes several days, and has variable performance between laboratories. One potential hurdle to culture usage beyond the slow growth rate of Legionella species is the use of BCYE media without antibiotics, allowing the growth of other bacteria. Some newer products have been released on the market that may improve the landscape of Legionella diagnostics. Among these is the BioFire® FilmArray® Pneumonia (PN) Panel, which can detect up to 33 bacterial and viral targets (including Legionella pneumophila) in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid or sputum [68].
Based on our dataset, we found that NAT-based techniques had a higher frequency of Legionella positivity compared to non-NAT-based ones (Table 6). PCR remains unstandardized across institutions, as many groups use in-house primers and divergent protocols. Ideally, PCR should capture a diverse population of Legionella by using a multiplex panel of primers targeting genus-conserved sequences (e.g., 16S rRNA) and species-conserved sequences in some of the more common species of Legionella such as L. pneumophila and L. longbeachae, with some adjustments made based on locality. While costly, the adoption of sequencing into diagnostics would contribute to better surveillance of clinically relevant strains, changes in drug resistance, and mutations over time [69]. Of note, European countries have shifted towards sequence-based typing for Legionella rather than serogroup, which can be used to obtain sequences and typify from culture-negative samples [70].
One of the key issues in pneumonia treatment is that the etiology of CAP is rarely identified, and empirical treatments may not cover atypical bacteria, especially within the context of people living with HIV (PLHIV) [3,71]. In most scenarios, the American Thoracic Society and Infectious Diseases Society of America do not recommend diagnosis until initial therapies have been exhausted, even suggesting the aversion of the UAT, unless the disease is severe [3,72]. Legionella cases requiring ICU admissions are associated with delayed urinary antigen testing and presumably Legionella testing in general [73]. Conversely, early concordant treatment reduces the probability of ICU admission [25,73]. Li et al. found that next-generation sequencing effectively detected fastidious organisms including Legionella in cases that culture failed to identify, even detecting pathogens when culture test results were negative, resulting in adjusted treatment in 55% of patients [74]. Thus, the delays and mistakes in Legionella identification are likely contributing to the high number of cases requiring hospitalization and intensive care.
Presumably, the reported case numbers of non-LpSG1 are inaccurate due to missed diagnoses. This is a conceivable scenario, as there are regional variations in species distribution and unidentified species were the third most common finding in our review [75]. Furthermore, many studies use culture or UAT for the initial diagnosis before further identification, only testing samples with other techniques when initial tests showed positive. Necessitating a positive result from these techniques introduces a bias toward the detected species or serogroups. Samples for culture are rare due to difficulties in obtaining bronchoalveolar lavage and sputum, while the UAT is over-selective [13,27,32,74]. Our findings show that the subgroups that warrant more deliberate monitoring are L. pneumophila regardless of serogroup, L. longbeachae, L. micdadei, and L. bozemanae (Table 4 and Table 5).
While it has been widely recognized that diagnosis of Legionella pneumonia is poor, Table 6 highlights the need for diagnostics to be more comprehensive. While accommodating the detection of all species of Legionella, the inter-study and presumably inter-lab consistency of PCR is unknown. The information included in our dataset suggests that PCR and DNA probes had a higher frequency of positivity, regardless of Legionella subgroup (Table 6). Of note, DNA probes were only used in one study, and of the studies that reported which type of PCR was used, all used real-time PCR. The difficulty in recovering respiratory samples further encourages the merits of testing multiple specimens. Without having to develop new techniques or products to detect Legionella in patient samples, there is a benefit in adopting a more comprehensive diagnostic regimen as conducted by Pasculle et al. and Decker et al. [24,53,73,76]. However, these are not without the drawback of a higher rate of false positives.
Beyond the consequences of a delayed diagnosis and impeded timely concordant treatment, limitations of Legionella diagnostics exacerbate the issue further by also delaying the recognition of outbreaks [5,77,78,79,80]. Identifying an outbreak of Legionella is crucial, as typical outbreak strategies such as isolation of cases will not reduce cases, and the medium by which Legionella is contracted (water) makes outbreaks very likely. The delay also contributes to increasing the mortality rate, as in immunosuppressed individuals the mortality rate can be up to 80% in infections across a range of different species of Legionella if left untreated [5,81]. Furthermore, up to 90% of Legionella infections are missed even in environments that are equipped for diagnosis and the increasing mortality rate, warranting an increase in testing frequency [5]. Our findings are in agreement with Decker et al., who found that systematically testing for Legionella in people diagnosed with pneumonia using two diagnostic techniques indicated that Legionella diagnoses had been underreported [76].
An opportunity for further research is to determine if PLHIV or other forms of immunosuppression have a higher susceptibility to specific subgroups of Legionella. While we had sought to investigate this, the lack of reporting of Legionella cases impeded our efforts in doing so. Head et al. found that 36% of PLHIV were coinfected with Legionella [81]. In their study, approximately one-third of the Legionella infections were caused by L. pneumophila, none of which were LPSG1 [81]. However, it is unclear if these proportions are due to geographical factors or the presence of HIV. Sivagnanam et al. found that 31% and 47% of their American transplant recipient cohort were infected with L. micdadei and L. pneumophila, respectively [60]. These studies emphasize the need to diversify diagnostic methods, especially in the immunocompromised population.
A limitation of our study is that further analyses cannot be performed because of a lack of information regarding the specific tests used, the differences in populations tested, the sample storage conditions, and that patients received inconsistent testing. Furthermore, studies used different techniques as their standards, only subjecting samples to further diagnosis with an initial positive result. Despite the heterogeneity in testing protocols and specific primers, PCR provided positive results in most tests. We were also unable to draw any conclusions about the effect of geographical distribution and regional testing conventions with the number of studies included in our review. Additionally, researchers are more likely to publish results that reveal particularly high or low prevalence, which may cause intermediate cases to be unrepresented within the literature. This was also the reasoning behind our inclusion criteria “at least 5 cases of LD in the patient group”, as articles reporting very few cases tended to be case reports/series or looking at isolated cases of LD without the generalized pneumonia context. Additionally, among the 30 studies that were excluded for the insufficient presence of Legionella, 15 found 0 cases of LD and 2 studies found 4 cases. The remaining 13 studies were also excluded for additional reasons, most frequently a lack of species/serogroup analysis and/or the absence of an NAT-based diagnosis.
In conclusion, the real epidemiology of Legionella infections is unclear due to the lack of an adequate diagnostic test that identifies other non-pneumophila serogroup 1 Legionella and different criteria on who, when, and how to diagnose Legionella [22,23,29,32,80]. It is essential to isolate strains and carry out epidemiological research studies using whole-genome sequencing to identify and track circulating strains of Legionella for future diagnostic test development, strains of concern, and clinical guideline updates.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/pathogens13100857/s1, Table S1. Search history, databases, and search terms (Supplementary material S1).

Author Contributions

Conceptualization: R.H., Y.K. and Z.V.R. Methodology: R.H. and Z.V.R. Investigation: R.H., A.H. and Z.V.R. Validation: Y.K. and Z.V.R. Formal Analysis: all authors. Data curation: R.H. and A.H. Writing—Original Draft: R.H. and A.H. Writing—Review and Editing: S.A.L., C.T., D.A., Y.K. and Z.V.R. Resources: Z.V.R. Visualization: R.H., A.H., Y.K. and Z.V.R. Supervision: Y.K. and Z.V.R. Project Administration: Z.V.R. Funding Acquisition: Z.V.R. and Y.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the Christopher Spitzke Critical Illness Research Endowment Fund (Y.K., grant number N/A). This research was also supported, in part, by the Canada Research Chairs Program for Z.V.R. (award # 950-232963). R.H. and A.H. received scholarships for their master studies funded by the CRC Program funding provided to Z.V.R. and R.H. also received the University of Manitoba Rady Faculty of Health Sciences Graduate Studentship. The funders did not have any role in the study design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data, in the writing of this paper, or in the decision to submit the article for publication.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Mariana Herrera Diaz for her methodological guidance during the abstract and full-text reviewing.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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Figure 1. PRISMA flowchart depicting the screening process generated by Covidence [34].
Figure 1. PRISMA flowchart depicting the screening process generated by Covidence [34].
Pathogens 13 00857 g001
Table 1. Current Legionella diagnostic techniques outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (4) a.
Table 1. Current Legionella diagnostic techniques outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (4) a.
Test Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) Advantages Disadvantages
Culture20–80100Detects all species/serogroups Technically difficult
Slow (3–5 days to grow)
Sensitivity dependent on technical skill
Affected by appropriate antibiotic therapy
No species identification without further testing
Urinary antigen test70–10095–100Rapid Only detects L. pneumophila serogroup 1 (LpSG1)
Non-invasive Some patients do not excrete the antigen or excrete the antigen intermittently
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)95–99>99Rapid Influenced by specimen quality
Can detect species/serogroups other than LpSG1Assays vary by laboratory
Limited commercial availability
Direct fluorescent antibody25–75>95Can detect species/serogroups other than LpSG1 Technically difficult
Reagents may be difficult to obtain
Serology80–90>99Can detect species/serogroups other than LpSG1Antibodies may be shared across species/serogroups
Cannot distinguish between current and past infection
a Modified from tables from the CDC [4].
Table 2. PICOT table outlining our research questions.
Table 2. PICOT table outlining our research questions.
Scoping Review QuestionPopulationIntervention/Exposure (Hypothesis)ComparatorOutcomeTime Frame
1 Individuals with pneumoniaGenotype-based techniques such as PCR and sequencingPhenotype-based techniques such as culture, serology, DFA, and UATIncidence, prevalence, and frequency of Legionella compatibility (specific species/strains as stratified by molecular techniques)N/A
2 Individuals with pneumonia who are immunocompromisedGenotype-based techniques such as PCR and sequencingPhenotype-based techniques such as culture, serology, DFA, and UAT Incidence, prevalence, and frequency of Legionella compatibility (specific species/strains as stratified by molecular techniques)N/A
Table 3. Summary of studies included in the scoping review.
Table 3. Summary of studies included in the scoping review.
First Author, Year of Publication, Reference Region(s) Year(s) of Study Population Sample Size (Cases) Sample Types Techniques Used Legionella Species or Serogroups Found b
Alexiou-Daniel et al., 1998 [35] Greece 1993–1998 Hospitalized legionellosis patients 24 Serum Serology a, culture, and PCR 22 LpSG1, 2 LpSG4
Beauté, 2017 [36] European Union states, Iceland, Norway 2011–2015 Legionella-infected individuals 30,532 Urine and serum UAT, culture, and PCR 3020 LpSG1, 19 LpSG2, 101 LpSG3, 13 LpSG4, 19LpSG5, 42 LpSG6, 9 LpSG7, 8 LpSG8, 5 LpSG9, 19 LpSG10, 3 LpSG11, 1 LpSG12, 2 LpSG13, 7 LpSG14, 4 mixed SG, 7 non-LpSG1, 232 Lp unknown SG, 2 La, 15 Lb, 1 Lc, 2 Ldu, 35 Ll, 1 Lma, 12 Lmi, 1 Ls, 27 other Legionella species, and 38 unknown Legionella species
Berger et al., 2006 [37] France 2002–2003 ICU pneumonia 210 BALF, serum, and urine RT-PCR, UAT, serology, and culture 10 Lp, 3 Lb, 2 La, 2 Lr, 1 Lq, and 1 Lwo
Cameron, 2016 [38] Scotland 2008–2014 Legionella-infected individuals 37 Respiratory samples, sputum, and urine PCR, serology, culture, and UAT 12 Ll and 25 Lp
Diederen et al., 2008 [39]Netherlands 1998–2000 CAP adults 242 Sputum, endotracheal aspirates, lung biopsy, and bronchoscopic specimens RT-PCR, UAT, and blood culture 11Lp and 2 non-pneumophila Legionella
Diederen et al., 2009 [40] Netherlands 2002–2005 Pneumonia compatibility 151 Sputum, blood, urine, serum, and BALF RT-PCR, culture, UAT, and ELISA 36 Lp and 4 non-pneumophila Legionella
Elverdal et al., 2013 [41]Denmark 2008–2010 Pneumonia (hospitalized) 10,503 Serum, LRT samples, blood, and urine ELISA, culture, UAT, and PCR 35 LpSG1, 1 LpSG2, 11 LpSG3, 1 LpSG5, 3 LpSG6, and 62 Legionella spp.
Ghorbani et al., 2021 [42]Iran 2019–2020 Pneumonia (hospitalized) 123 Sputum, BALF, and pleural aspirates Culture and RT-PCR 8 Lp and 1 Lc
Isenman et al., 2016 [43]New Zealand 2009–2013 Legionella-infected individuals 126 Urine, LRT samples, and serum Culture, PCR, UAT, and serology 107 Ll and 19 Lp
Jespersen et al., 2009 [44]Denmark 1995–2005 Legionella-infected individuals 370 Urine and serum UAT, serology, PCR, and culture 110 LpSG1, 4 LpSG2, 39 LpSG3, 3 LpSG4, 6 LpSG6, 4 Lp unknown serogroup, 4 Lb, 2 Lmi, and 161 unknown Legionella species
de Jong et al., 2010 [19]Europe 2010 Legionella-infected travelers 864 Urine and serum UAT, PCR, culture, and serology 672 LpSG1, 3 LpSG3, 2 LpSG6, 1 LpSG12, 3 mixed SG, 158 unknown SG Lp, 1 Lb, 10 unknown species, and 14 unreported species
Joseph, 2004 [45] Europe 2000–2002 Legionella-infected travelers 10,322 Urine and serum UAT, serology, PCR, direct antigen, and culture 7900 LpSG1, 1749 Lp, 9 LpSG2, 35 LpSG3, 5 LpSG4, 10 LpSG5, 22 LpSG6, 1 LpSG7, 2 LpSG8, 7 LpSG10/14, 673 non-pneumophila Legionella, 2 La, 4 Lb, 2 Ldu, 1 Lg, and 3 Ll
Joseph et al., 2010 [46]Europe 2007–2008 Legionella-infected individuals 11,867 Serum, urine, and respiratory samples Culture, UAT, serology, respiratory antigen, and PCR 9436 LpSG1, 1785 non-SG1 Lp, and 646 unknown/other species
Kim et al., 2015, [47]South Korea 2000–2001 Suspected LD 10 Sputum and urine UAT, serology, RT-PCR, and culture 5 LpSG1, 1 LpSG 2-14, and 4 unknown Legionella spp.
Lever, 2003, [48] Europe 2000–2001 Legionella-infected travelers 841 Urine, serum, and respiratory samples Urine, serology, PCR, and culture 303 LpSG1 and 407 other serogroup/species
Lindsay et al., 1994 [49]Scotland N/A Proven cases of LD 5 Serum and urine UAT, serology, culture, and PCR 4 LpSG1 and 1 LpSG12
Löf et al., 2021 [50]Sweden 2018 Non-pneumophila Legionella cases 41 N/A UAT, RT-PCR, culture, and serology 6 non-pneumophila Legionella, 33 Ll, and 2 Lb
Maniwa et al., 2006 [51]Japan 1999–2005 Legionella-infected individuals 30 Urine, sputum, BALF, and serum culture, UAT, PCR, and serology 10 LpSG1, 2 LpSG6, 1 Ll, and 17 unknown Legionella species
Murdoch et al., 1996 [52]New Zealand 1992–1995 Previously confirmed LD positive or negative 52 Urine and serum PCR, culture, serology, and ELISA 2 LpSG1, 1 LpSG3, 3 LpSG4, 2 LpSG5, 1 LpSG6, 1 LpSG7, 1 LpSG10, 2 LpSG12, 2 LpSG13, 10 Lmi, 3 Ll, 3Lj, 1 Lb, and 1 Lg
Pasculle et al., 1989 [53]US 1987 Legionella-infected individuals 809 Sputum ELISA, culture, and DNA probe 6 LpSG1, 2 LpSG4, 1 LpSG6, 1 Lmi, and 2 LpSG1/Lmi
Pouderoux et al., 2019 [54]France 2013–2017 Culture-positive LD 1686 Sputum, bronchial aspirate, and BALF Culture, real-time RT-PCR, WGS, and serology 9 LpSG1, 1 LpSG3, 1 LpSG8, 1 Legionella spp., and 1 LpSG2/6/12
Priest et al., 2019 [55]New Zealand 2015–2016 Pneumonia 4826 LRT specimens, and urine PCR, culture, MALDI-TOF, serology, and UAT 52 Lp, 150 Ll, 24 other Legionella species, and 12 non-speciated Legionella
Qin et al., 2016 [56]China 2012–2013 Pneumonia or LRTIs in hospital 624 BALF and sputum Culture, RT-PCR, and sequencing 70 Lp and 1 other Legionella species
Ricketts et al., 2005 [57]Europe 2003–2004 Legionella-infected individuals 9166 Urine, serum, and respiratory samples Culture, UAT, serology, antigen detection, and PCR 7007 LpSG1, 1526 non-SG1 Lp, and 633 other Legionella spp.
Ricketts et al., 2007 [46]Europe 2005–2006 Legionella-infected individuals 11,980 Respiratory samples, urine, and serum Culture, UAT, serology, and PCR 9219 LpSG1, 1862 Lp non-SG1/unknown SG, and 899 unknown Legionella species
Ricketts et al., 2010 [58]Europe 2008 Legionella-infected individuals 866 N/A Culture, serology, PCR, and UAT 57 LpSG1, 1 LpSG2, 1 LpSG3, 3 Lp unknown SG, and 1 unknown Legionella spp.
Scaturro et al., 2021 [59]Italy 2018 Pneumonia patients 33 Urine, serum, and respiratory secretions UAT, RT-PCR, culture, serology, and single high titer 18 Lp unclear SG and 15 LpSG2
Sivagnanam et al., 2017 [60]US 1999–2013 Transplant recipients suspected of Legionella infection 4090 BALF, blood, sputum, urine, and tissue Culture, UAT, sequencing, and MALDI-TOF 7 LpSG1, 8 unknown SG Lp, 10 Lmi, 4 Ll, 1 Lwa, 1 Lt, and 1 Ldu
Tateda et al., 1998 [61]Japan N/A Suspected Legionella infection 36 Sputum, BALF, serum, and urine Culture, serology, UAT, and PCR 12 Lp, 1 Lb, and 1 Lp/Ldu
Waller et al., 2022 [21]Australia 2010–2021 Legionellosis patients 53 Urine and serum UAT, serology, and PCR 31 Ll, 22 Lp, and 2 Legionella spp.
ELISA includes DFA. Unspecified PCR techniques are listed as “PCR”. Abbreviations: LP, L. pneumophila; Lb, L. bozemanii or L. bozemanae (sic); La, L. anisa; Lr, L. rubrilucens; Lq, L. quinlivanii; Lwo, L. worsleiensis; Lc, L. cherrii; Ll, L. longbeachae; SG, serogroup; Ldu, L. dumoffii; Lmi, L. micdadei; Lj, L. jordanis; Lg, L. gormanii; Lwa, L. wadsworthii; Lt, L. tucsonensis; Lc, L. cincinnatiensis; Lma, L. maceachernii; Ls, L. sainthelensi; BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; LRT, lower respiratory tract; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; UAT, urinary antigen test; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; WGS, whole-genome sequencing; SBT, sequence-based typing; RT, real-time. a Serology includes seroconversion and high antibody titers against Legionella. b Species separated by a slash (“/”) are present as coinfections.
Table 4. Breakdown of reported cases of Legionella subgroups relative to the cumulative population of pneumonia cases a.
Table 4. Breakdown of reported cases of Legionella subgroups relative to the cumulative population of pneumonia cases a.
Species People Diagnosed with Legionella Total Population
Diagnosed with Pneumonia
Frequency Frequency Range
LpSG1 35 16,751 0.209% 0.333–23.8%
LpSG2 1 0.006% 0.0095% *
LpSG3 11 0.066% 0.105% *
LpSG5 1 0.006% 0.0095% *
LpSG6 3 0.018% 0.00286% *
Lp unknown SG 199 1.190% 1.07–33.3%
L. longbeachae150 0.895% 0.0978–3.085%
L. bozemanae4 0.024% 1.43–2.778%
L. anisa2 0.012% 0.952% *
L. rubrilucens2 0.012% 0.952% *
L.cherrii1 0.006% 0.813% *
L.dumoffii1 0.006% 2.778% *
L.quinlivanii1 0.006% 0.476% *
L.worsleiensis1 0.006% 0.476% *
Unknown Legionella spp. 105 0.627% 0.160–2.649%
Total 509 3.086% -
a Data compiled from 9 studies. Abbreviation(s): Lp; L. pneumophila. a In studies involving national surveillance, the total population is reduced to that of individuals diagnosed with pneumonia based on the information provided in the study. Studies only reporting patients who were positive for Legionnaires’ disease were excluded from the analysis summarized in this table. Total population includes individuals who presented with pneumonia but tested negative for Legionella and those who tested positive. Frequency ranges show the frequency of Legionella within the population of a given study. Serogroups and species examined in only one eligible study for this analysis have their frequencies marked with an asterisk (*).
Table 5. Relative frequency of Legionella serogroups and species compared to total Legionella-positive cases in the literature a.
Table 5. Relative frequency of Legionella serogroups and species compared to total Legionella-positive cases in the literature a.
Serogroups Number of Cases Frequency
LpSG1 38,506 50.064%
Lp unknown serogroup 7550 9.816%
LpSG3 194 0.252%
LpSG6 79 0.103%
LpSG2 51 0.066%
LpSG5 32 0.042%
LpSG4 28 0.036%
LpSG10 27 0.035%
LpSG14 14 0.018%
LpSG7 11 0.014%
LpSG8 11 0.014%
LpSG9 7 0.008%
LpSG12 6 0.008%
LpSG13 4 0.005%
LpSG11 3 * 0.004%
Species
Unknown Legionella spp. 29,890 38.862%
L. longbeachae371 0.482%
L. micdadei37 0.048%
Unknown non-pneumophila Legionella 37 0.048%
L. bozemanae31 0.040%
L. anisa6 0.008%
L. dumoffi6 0.008%
L. gormanii3 0.004%
L. maceachernii2 0.003%
L. rubrilucens2 * 0.003%
L. quinlivanii1 * 0.001%
L. worsleiensis1 * 0.001%
L. cherrii1 * 0.001%
L. wadsworthii1 * 0.001%
L. tucsonensis1 * 0.001%
L. cincinnatiensis1 * 0.001%
L. sainthelensi1 * 0.001%
a Serogroups and species examined in only one eligible study have their frequencies marked with an asterisk (*). Abbreviations: Lp, L. pneumophila; SG, serogroup. Data compiled from 31 studies.
Table 6. Qualitative summary of diagnostics by Legionella species and serogroup, separated by technique a.
Table 6. Qualitative summary of diagnostics by Legionella species and serogroup, separated by technique a.
First Author Spp/SG UAT PCR Serology DFA Culture DNA Probe
Ghorbani [42] L. pneumophila- 7/7 - - 2/7 -
L. cherrii- 1/1 - - 0/1 -
Total - 8/8 - - 2/8 -
Isenman [43] L. longbeachae2/99 107/107 10/10 - 44/107 -
L. pneumophila- 19/19 - - 12/19 -
Total 2/99 126/126 10/10 - 56/126 -
Lindsay [49] LpSG1 4/4 4/4 4/4 - 1/3 -
LpSG12 0/1 1/1 1/1 - 0/1 -
Total 4/5 5/5 5/5 - 1/4 -
Murdoch [52]LpSG1 - Serum: 0/2
Urine: 1/2
- 1/2 2/2 -
LpSG3 - Serum: 0/1
Urine: 0/1
- 0/1 0/1 -
LpSG4 - Serum: 1/2
Urine: 2/2
- 0/1 0/1 -
LpSG4/5 - Serum: 1/1
Urine: 1/1
- 1/1 1/1 -
LpSG5 - Serum: 1/1
Urine: 0/1
- 1/1 0/1 -
LpSG6 - Serum: 0/1
Urine: 0/1
- 0/1 0/1 -
LpSG7 - Serum: 1/1
Urine: 1/1
- 1/1 1/1 -
LpSG10/12 - Serum: 0/1
Urine: 1/1
- 0/1 0/1 -
LpSG12/13 - Serum: 0/1
Urine: 0/1
- 0/1 0/1 -
LpSG13 - Serum: 0/1
Urine: 1/1
- 1/1 1/1 -
L. micdadei *- Serum: 4/10
Urine: 5/10
- 4/6 0/6 -
L. longbeachae *- Serum: 1/3
Urine: 0/3
- 2/2 0/2 -
L. jordanis **- Serum: 3/3
Urine: 0/3
- 0/3 0/3 -
L. bozemanae **- Serum: 1/1
Urine: 0/1
- 0/1 0/1 -
L. gormanii- Serum: 0/1
Urine: 1/1
- - - -
- Serum: 13/30
Urine: 13/30
- 11/23 5/23 -
Pasculle (admission) [53]LpSG1 - - - 5/8 8/8 6/8
LpSG4 - - - 2/2 2/2 2/2
LpSG6 - - - 1/1 1/1 1/1
L. micdadei- - - 3/3 3/3 3/3
Total - - - 11/14 14/14 12/14
Pasculle (follow-up) [53]LpSG1 - - - 8/8 8/8 8/8
LpSG4 - - - 2/2 2/2 2/2
LpSG6 - - - 1/1 1/1 1/1
L. micdadei- - - 3/3 3/3 3/3
Total - - - 14/14 14/14 14/14
Pouderoux (initial infection) [54] LpSG1 9/10 - - - 9/10 -
LpSG3 - - - - 1/1 -
LpSG8 - - - - 1/1 -
Total 9/10 - - - 11/12 -
Pouderoux (recurrent infection) [54]LpSG1 - 7/10 - - 8/10 -
LpSG3 - 1/1 - - 1/1 -
LpSG2-6-12 - 1/1 - - 1/1 -
Total - 9/12 - - 10/12 -
Waller [21] L. pneumophila8/16 4/5 Acute: 10/16
Convalescent: 2/11
- - -
L. longbeachae- 3/6 Acute: 19/28
Convalescent: 9/30
- - -
Total 8/16 7/11 Acute: 29/44
Convalescent: 11/41
- - -
Total - 23/130 181/222 55/100 36/51 113/213 26/28
Frequency of positivity (%) - 17.69 81.53 55.00 70.59 53.05 92.86
* These species were observed in a coinfection. ** These species were observed in a separate coinfection. a All cases outlined in this table are confirmed cases. Numerators are the number of positive tests, while denominators are the number of total tests applied to that species or serogroup. Pasculle et al. included data from initial diagnoses and repeat diagnostics conducted over 9 days of patient hospitalization [53]. Results from both datasets are listed separately. Slowly resolving Legionnaires’ disease cases from Pouderoux et al. are included in the initial infections, while reinfections/recurrent infections are outlined in recurrent infections [54]. Abbreviations: SG, serogroup; UAT, urinary antigen test; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; DFA, direct fluorescent antibody.
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Ha, R.; Heilmann, A.; Lother, S.A.; Turenne, C.; Alexander, D.; Keynan, Y.; Rueda, Z.V. The Adequacy of Current Legionnaires’ Disease Diagnostic Practices in Capturing the Epidemiology of Clinically Relevant Legionella: A Scoping Review. Pathogens 2024, 13, 857. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens13100857

AMA Style

Ha R, Heilmann A, Lother SA, Turenne C, Alexander D, Keynan Y, Rueda ZV. The Adequacy of Current Legionnaires’ Disease Diagnostic Practices in Capturing the Epidemiology of Clinically Relevant Legionella: A Scoping Review. Pathogens. 2024; 13(10):857. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens13100857

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ha, Ryan, Ashley Heilmann, Sylvain A. Lother, Christine Turenne, David Alexander, Yoav Keynan, and Zulma Vanessa Rueda. 2024. "The Adequacy of Current Legionnaires’ Disease Diagnostic Practices in Capturing the Epidemiology of Clinically Relevant Legionella: A Scoping Review" Pathogens 13, no. 10: 857. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens13100857

APA Style

Ha, R., Heilmann, A., Lother, S. A., Turenne, C., Alexander, D., Keynan, Y., & Rueda, Z. V. (2024). The Adequacy of Current Legionnaires’ Disease Diagnostic Practices in Capturing the Epidemiology of Clinically Relevant Legionella: A Scoping Review. Pathogens, 13(10), 857. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens13100857

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