A randomized controlled trial assessing infectious disease risks from bathing in fresh recreational waters in relation to the concentration of Escherichia coli, intestinal enterococci, Clostridium perfringens, and somatic coliphages.We performed epidemiologic studies epidemiologic study A study that compares 2 groups of people who are alike except for one factor, such as exposure to a chemical or the presence of a health effect; the investigators try to determine if any factor is associated with the health effect at public freshwater fresh·wa·ter adj. 1. Of, relating to, living in, or consisting of water that is not salty: freshwater fish; freshwater lakes. 2. Situated away from the sea; inland. 3. bathing sites in Germany to provide a better scientific basis for the definition of recreational water quality standards. A total of 2,196 participants were recruited from the local population and randomized ran·dom·ize tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment. into bathers and nonbathers. Bathers were exposed for 10 min and had to immerse im·merse tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es 1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge. 2. To baptize by submerging in water. 3. their head at least three times. Water samples for microbiological analysis were collected at 20-min intervals. Unbiased concentration-response effects with no-observed-adverse-effect levels (NOAELs) were demonstrated for three different definitions of gastroenteritis gastroenteritis: see enteritis. gastroenteritis Acute infectious syndrome of the stomach lining and intestines. Symptoms include diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps. and four fecal fecal /fe·cal/ (fe´k'l) pertaining to or of the nature of feces. fe·cal adj. Relating to or composed of feces. fecal pertaining to or of the nature of feces. indicator organisms. Relative risks for bathing in waters with levels above NOAELs compared with nonbathing ranged from 1.8 (95% CI, 1.2-2.6) to 4.6 (95% CI, 2.1-10.1), depending on the definition of gastroenteritis. The effect of swallowing water provided additional evidence for true dose-response relationships The Dose-response relationship describes the change in effect on an organism caused by differing levels of exposure (or doses) to a stressor (usually a chemical). This may apply to individuals (eg: a small amount has no observable effect, a large amount is fatal), or to populations . Based on the NOAELs, the following guide values for water quality are suggested: 100 Escherichia coli Escherichia coli (ĕsh'ərĭk`ēə kō`lī), common bacterium that normally inhabits the intestinal tracts of humans and animals, but can cause infection in other parts of the body, especially the urinary tract. , 25 intestinal in·tes·ti·nal adj. Of, relating to, or constituting the intestine. intestinal pertaining to the intestine. intestinal accident enterococci enterococci bacteria in the genus Enterococcus. , 10 somatic somatic /so·mat·ic/ (so-mat´ik) 1. pertaining to or characteristic of the soma or body. 2. pertaining to the body wall in contrast to the viscera. so·mat·ic adj. coliphages, or 10 Clostridium perfringens Clostridium per·frin·gens or Clostridium welchii n. Gas bacillus. Clostridium perfringens Infectious disease An anaerobic gram-positive spore-forming rod, widely distributed in nature and present in the per 100 mL. Recreational water quality standards are intended to protect the health of those consumers who are not already immune or resistant to pathogens that may be associated with indicator organisms. In contrast to current World Health Organization recommendations, we concluded that standards should be based on rates of compliance with NOAELs rather than on attributable risks attributable risk Epidemiology Any factor which ↑ the risk of suffering a particular condition. See Relative risk, Risk factor. Cf Nonattributable risk Statistics The rate of a disorder in exposed subjects that is attributable to the exposure derived from determined above NOAELs, because these risks depend mainly on the unpredictable susceptibility susceptibility the state of being susceptible. Refers usually to infectious disease but may be to physical factors such as wetting or to psychological factors such as harassment. of the cohorts. Although in theory there is no threshold in real concentration-response relationships, we demonstrated that a NOAEL NOAEL, n ‘no-observed-adverse-effect-level,’ the maximum concentration of a substance that is found to have no adverse effects upon the test subject. approach would be a more robust and practical solution to the complex problem of setting standards. Key words: bathing, Clostridium perfringens, Escherichia coli, fecal indicators, fecal water pollution, fresh recreational water, gastroenteritis, health risks, intestinal enterococci, somatic coliphages. ********** Recreational waters are monitored worldwide to protect the health of bathers from infectious diseases infectious diseases: see communicable diseases. caused by waterborne pathogens that are associated with the pollution of natural recreational waters by human and animal feces feces or excrement or stools Solid bodily waste discharged from the colon through the anus during defecation. Normal feces are 75% water. The rest is about 30% dead bacteria, 30% indigestible food matter, 10–20% cholesterol and other fats, , and the results of monitoring are the basis for corrective action A corrective action is a change implemented to address a weakness identified in a management system. Normally corrective actions are instigated in response to a customer complaint, abnormal levels if internal nonconformity, nonconformities identified during an internal audit or where necessary. Water quality standards are typically based on measurements of the concentrations of fecal indicator organisms. In 1998 a review carried out on behalf of the World Health Organization (WHO) (Pruss 1998) assessed all available epidemiologic ep·i·de·mi·ol·o·gy n. The branch of medicine that deals with the study of the causes, distribution, and control of disease in populations. [Medieval Latin epid information on associations between the risk of infection for bathers and the concentration of fecal indicator organisms in fresh and marine recreational waters. Most studies reported an increase of health risk in swimmers with an increase in the indicator-bacteria count in recreational water. Relative risk (RR) values for swimming in polluted pol·lute tr.v. pol·lut·ed, pol·lut·ing, pol·lutes 1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter. See Synonyms at contaminate. 2. water versus clean water or versus staying on a beach without entering the water were often significant and usually ranged between 1 and 3. Both Priiss (1998) and the current guidelines guidelines, n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks. of the WHO (2003) have identified the randomized controlled trial A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is a scientific procedure most commonly used in testing medicines or medical procedures. RCTs are considered the most reliable form of scientific evidence because it eliminates all forms of spurious causality. design as the one that yields the most reliable results when associations between the degree of fecal water pollution and the risk of infection are investigated. This conclusion has been based primarily on the fact that the randomized controlled trial design minimizes nondifferential misclassification bias resulting from the inaccurate assignment of microbial microbial pertaining to or emanating from a microbe. microbial digestion the breakdown of organic material, especially feedstuffs, by microbial organisms. concentrations in the water to exposed participants. However, to this day, results from only one study of this kind are available for exposure to seawater seawater Water that makes up the oceans and seas. Seawater is a complex mixture of 96.5% water, 2.5% salts, and small amounts of other substances. Much of the world's magnesium is recovered from seawater, as are large quantities of bromine. . The results presented here are the first ever collected in a randomized controlled trial in fresh water. In addition, this randomized controlled trial is the first to study a cohort cohort /co·hort/ (ko´hort) 1. in epidemiology, a group of individuals sharing a common characteristic and observed over time in the group. 2. that includes children and teenagers, who usually make up a considerable percentage of the visitors at public bathing Public baths originated from a communal need for cleanliness. Often the term public is misleading to some people, as they will have restrictions based upon who can use the facility — elite members of the culture, men only, religious only. sites. Materials and Methods Study sites. We performed the present study at five German freshwater bathing sites. All study sites had been registered to the European Commission's atlas of European bathing beaches (European Commission European Commission, branch of the governing body of the European Union (EU) invested with executive and some legislative powers. Located in Brussels, Belgium, it was founded in 1967 when the three treaty organizations comprising what was then the European Community 2005). They had complied with current European standards (Council of the European Communities European Community: see European Union. European Community (EC) Organization formed in 1967 with the merger of the European Economic Community, European Coal and Steel Community, and European Atomic Energy Community. 1976) for at least 2the three previous bathing seasons. Bathing sites in the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the European Community comply with the microbiological quality criteria when 95% of all sample results of a complete bathing season do not exceed the "imperative values" (legally binding) of 2,000 fecal coliforms Fecal coliforms (sometimes faecal coliforms) are facultatively-anaerobic, rod-shaped, gram-negative, non-sporulating bacteria. They are capable of growth in the presence of bile salts or similar surface agents, oxidase negative, and produce acid and gas from lactose within and 10,000 total coliforms per 100 mL. In addition, it is recommended that 80% of the sample results comply with a "guide value" of 100 fecal coliforms and that 90% of the samples comply with a guide value of 100 fecal streptococci Streptococcus (plural, streptococci) A genus of spherical-shaped anaerobic bacteria occurring in pairs or chains. Sydenham's chorea is considered a complication of a streptococcal throat infection. per 100 mL. Study locations were situated in the north, northeast, southwest, and southeast of Germany: four sites on lakes and one site on a river. Sources of fecal contamination included treated and untreated municipal sewage, agricultural runoff Runoff The procedure of printing the end-of-day prices for every stock on an exchange onto ticker tape. Notes: If the "tape is late" then it can take a long time to print off all the closing prices. , and contamination from water fowl [details in Supplemental material Annex an·nex tr.v. an·nexed, an·nex·ing, an·nex·es 1. To append or attach, especially to a larger or more significant thing. 2. 1 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/ 2005/8115/supplemental.pdf)]. Ethical clearance. The trial design was approved by the ethics commission In the United States, an Ethics Commission is a commission established by State law to discourage dishonest practices by their public employees and elected officials. Almost all American states have such a commission. of the medical faculty of the Eberhard Karls University Tubingen. Recruitment of the study cohort. A total of 2,196 participants were recruited from the local population. In the 3 weeks before each trial, the study design and the purpose of the study were promoted with the help of the local media, and information flyers were distributed at information desks and on the beaches. People could register for participation either directly at the information desks or by calling a telephone number and making an appointment for an initial interview and medical examination. For the pilot trial at study location 1, only volunteers > 18 years of age were accepted for participation. After additional ethical clearance, the lower age limit was set to 4 years for the remaining trials at study locations 2-5. All adult participants and teenagers between 14 and 18 years of age gave their written informed consent before participating. Teenagers between 14 and 18 years of age were accepted with the written, signed consent of their parents or legal guardians. Children < 14 years of age were accepted with the written, signed consent of both parents or legal guardians and had to be accompanied by at least one parent or a legal guardian. Children < 4 years of age were not accepted because they were considered to be a potential source of fecal accidents during the trials. Enrollment. Two to three days before exposure, the participants were interviewed in person, and all participants underwent a short medical examination. The medical checkups were performed by professional physicians and included monitoring the questionnaire data with respect to the details on the participants' health conditions; a brief discussion on specific health problems such as chronic diseases, infections, or injuries in the participant's medical history if required; an inspection of the eyes, ears, and throat; and an electronic temperature measurement in the ear. Volunteers were included if they appeared to be physically and mentally fit for participation in the study trials. Reasons for exclusion were serious acute infectious diseases or fever (> 38.0[degrees]C), acute nausea nausea, sensation of discomfort, or queasiness, in the stomach. It may be caused by irritation of the stomach by food or drugs, unpleasant odors, overeating, fright, or psychological stress. It is usually relieved by vomiting. or diarrhea diarrhea (dīərē`ə), frequent discharge of watery feces from the intestines, sometimes containing blood and mucus. It can be caused by excessive indulgence in alcohol or other liquids or foods that prove irritating to the stomach or , wounds that had not healed, or health conditions where bathing might have presented a serious or life-threatening risk. Allocation. On the exposure day, participants were randomized into equal-sized groups of bathers and nonbathers. Randomization randomization (ranˈ·d Trial design. Each participant received a standardized standardized pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures. standardized morbidity rate see morbidity rate. standardized mortality rate see mortality rate. lunch package and a bottle of mineral water; 20 of the lunch packages per trial were microbiologically analyzed an·a·lyze tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es 1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations. 2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of. 3. and monitored for food pathogens in a state food safety laboratory. All food items complied with their specific quality standards. The purpose of serving this controlled lunch package was to exclude the theoretical possibility of a food-borne outbreak that might have occurred if the participants had bought their lunch at local fast-food stores on the beach. The bathers were assigned to one of four roped-off bathing areas of approximately 10 m width and 20 m length that were distributed across the beach, with each divided into a nonswimmers' zone with shallow water See:
When the participants arrived at their destination--either the nonbathers' area or one of the four bathing areas--they were interviewed again by one of the project helpers. In this second interview, the questions focused on symptoms having occurred after the first interview and on nutritional details of the preceding 2 or 3 days. Participants who reported any new symptoms were sent to one of the physicians on site, who decided whether these symptoms were a reason for exclusion. After the interview, the participants were free to have their lunch, and nonbathers were free to stay in the nonbathers' area for normal beach activities such as sunbathing or playing, depending on the weather conditions. Participants who had been randomized for bathing entered the water under the individual supervision of their interviewers. Bathing duration was limited to exactly 10 min, and participants were asked to stay inside the roped-off swimming zones and to stay or swim around balloons that had been placed like buoys in the center of the zones. They were also instructed to completely immerse their heads at least three times during the 10 min. The supervisors individually recorded the start and ending times of the bathing period and the number of head immersions performed in each of the 10-min-periods. After leaving the water, the participants were asked whether they had accidentally swallowed water. Microbiological analyses. For the entire time the participants were being exposed, water samples were collected every 20 min from the centers of the swimmers' and nonswimmers' zones in all four areas. These samples were analyzed in a nearby mobile laboratory for six microbiological parameters: Escherichia coli [International Standardization standardization In industry, the development and application of standards that make it possible to manufacture a large volume of interchangeable parts. Standardization may focus on engineering standards, such as properties of materials, fits and tolerances, and drafting Organization (ISO (1) See ISO speed. (2) (International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, www.iso.ch) An organization that sets international standards, founded in 1946. The U.S. member body is ANSI. ) 1998b], intestinal enterococci (ISO 1998a), Clostridium perfringens (Council of the European Union Council of the European Union, branch of the governing body of the European Union (EU) that has the final vote on legislation proposed by the European Commission and deliberated by the European Parliament. 1998), somatic coliphages (ISO 2000), aeromonads (Schulze 1996), and pyocyanine-positive Pseudomonas aeruginosa Pseudomonas aeruginosa A normal soil inhabitant and human saprophyte that may contaminate various solutions in a hospital, causing opportunistic infection in weakened Pts Clinical Infective endocarditis in IVDAs, RTIs, UTIs, bacteremia, meningitis, 'malignant' (Deutches Institut fur Normung, European Normalization In relational database management, a process that breaks down data into record groups for efficient processing. There are six stages. By the third stage (third normal form), data are identified only by the key field in their record. 2002). The values of the method-specific lower detection limits were assigned to all samples with analytical results below the detection limit, and the results were censored cen·sor n. 1. A person authorized to examine books, films, or other material and to remove or suppress what is considered morally, politically, or otherwise objectionable. 2. . Upper detection limits were not reached in any of the samples. Method details are given in Supplemental material Annex 2 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/ supplemental.pdf). Microbiological quality control. Quality control procedures included positive and negative media controls for all target organisms and temperature control of all incubators with continuously operating digital temperature displays and additional electronic devices recording minimum and maximum temperatures throughout the incubation period incubation period n. 1. See latent period. 2. See incubative stage. Incubation period . As a quality control procedure for E. coli E. coli: see Escherichia coli. E. coli in full Escherichia coli Species of bacterium that inhabits the stomach and intestines. E. coli can be transmitted by water, milk, food, or flies and other insects. and intestinal enterococci, external quantitative reference materials were applied that had been evaluated in earlier international round-robin trials ("reference lenticules K," donated by Institut Pasteur de Lille, Lille, France; European Community contract SMT (1) (Surface Mount Technology) See surface mount. (2) (Station ManagemenT) An FDDI network management protocol that provides direct management. Only one node requires the software. SMT - Station Management 4-CT95-1603/ DG12-RSMT; Contreras-Coll et al. 2002). PhiX-174 coliphages were used as positive controls in the somatic coliphage coliphage /col·i·phage/ (kol´i-faj) any bacteriophage that infects Escherichia coli. co·li·phage n. A bacteriophage with an affinity for a strain of Escherichia coli. assay. Follow-up. One week after exposure, all the participants were interviewed again in person and underwent a medical inspection of the throat, eyes, and ears. Interviewers and doctors were unaware of the exposure status of the participants. Three weeks after exposure, the participants received a last questionnaire by mail. After receipt of this fourth questionnaire, each participant received a compensation of 25 Euros to cover personal expenses. Data entry, verification, and analysis. All questionnaire data were entered into an electronic database created with Epi Info Epi Info is a public domain statistical software for epidemiology developed by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia (USA), Epi Info has been in existence for over 20 years and is (version 6.2; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , Atlanta, GA, USA) and verified by an independent second entry. Statistical analyses were performed using the JMP JMP Jump JMP Java Memory Profiler JMP Joint Manpower Program JMP Joint Management Plan JMP Joint Marketing Program JMP JCL Manipulation Program JMP Joint Mission Planning (US DoD) JMP Joint Military Program (version 5.0; SAS Institute SAS Institute Inc., headquartered in Cary, North Carolina, USA, has been a major producer of software since it was founded in 1976 by Anthony Barr, James Goodnight, John Sall and Jane Helwig. Inc., Cary, NC, USA), STATCALC in Epi Info, and MS Excel 97 (Microsoft Corporation (company) Microsoft Corporation - The biggest supplier of operating systems and other software for IBM PC compatibles. Software products include MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, Windows NT, Microsoft Access, LAN Manager, MS Client, SQL Server, Open Data Base Connectivity (ODBC), MS Mail, , Redmond, WA, USA). Calculation of individual exposure concentrations. For each minute of trial duration (between 220 and 240 min, depending on the number of participants per site), microbial concentrations in the water were calculated by arithmetic interpolation interpolation In mathematics, estimation of a value between two known data points. A simple example is calculating the mean (see mean, median, and mode) of two population counts made 10 years apart to estimate the population in the fifth year. between the results obtained by analyzing the water samples. This was done for all bathing areas and in both the swimmers' and the nonswimmers' zones. The microbial concentrations of each of the 10 min of water contact were individually assigned to each of the bathers in their individual exposure area. The values from the nonswimmers' or the swimmers' zones were used, depending on where the participant was staying. Finally, individual exposure concentrations for all microbiological parameters were assigned to each bather by calculation of the arithmetic mean (mathematics) arithmetic mean - The mean of a list of N numbers calculated by dividing their sum by N. The arithmetic mean is appropriate for sets of numbers that are added together or that form an arithmetic series. concentration of the 10 individual exposure minutes. Participants with unacceptable exposure data were excluded from further analysis. Exposure data were considered to be unacceptable if the participants did not comply with their randomization status, if they entered the water too early or too late, or if the total exposure time was less or more than 10 min. Exposure definitions. We defined exposure in two different ways. The first definition was "10 min bathing with at least three head immersions," which is equivalent to the instructions that the participants had received from the study organizers. For this definition the arithmetic mean of the 10 concentrations that had been calculated and assigned as described above was used as the mean exposure concentration of every individual bather. We used the second definition of exposure to assess the influence of the number of head immersions. It takes into account the fact that the participants followed the instructions to immerse their heads at least three times to a varying extent. Because each immersion immersion /im·mer·sion/ (i-mer´zhun) 1. the plunging of a body into a liquid. 2. the use of the microscope with the object and object glass both covered with a liquid. of the head could be looked on as an equivalent for the uptake uptake /up·take/ (up´tak) absorption and incorporation of a substance by living tissue. up·take n. of a certain small amount of water via the eyes and the lacrimal duct lacrimal duct n. A curved canal beginning at the margin of each eyelid near the medial commissure, and emptying with the duct from the other eye into the lacrimal sac. Also called lacrimal canal. , the nose and throat, and the mouth, the minute-specific concentrations of all minutes during which the head was immersed im·merse tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es 1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge. 2. To baptize by submerging in water. 3. were multiplied with the number of head immersions during each of these minutes and added. The result can be considered to be the theoretical equivalent of a single head immersion at that concentration. This second theoretical definition of exposure was therefore called "single head immersion." Calculation of incidence rates, RRs, and attributable risks. We calculated incidence rates as the number of cases with onset of disease in the week or the 3 weeks after exposure divided by the number of individuals observed during these periods in a defined exposure category [nonbathers, bathers, bathers exposed below or above no-observed-adverse-effect levels (NOAELs), bathers exposed in quartile Quartile A statistical term describing a division of observations into four defined intervals based upon the values of the data and how they compare to the entire set of observations. Notes: Each quartile contains 25% of the total observations. or quintile quin·tile n. 1. The astrological aspect of planets distant from each other by 72° or one fifth of the zodiac. 2. Statistics The portion of a frequency distribution containing one fifth of the total sample. categories of microbial concentrations], and used percentage as the unit of measurement. We calculated RRs as the incidence rates among participants in a defined exposure category (bathers or bathers exposed above NOAELs) divided by the incidence rates among unexposed participants (nonbathers). We calculated attributable risks (aRs) as the difference between the incidence rates (percent) observed in two different exposure categories (e.g., incidence rates of bathers above NOAELs minus the incidence rates of nonbathers). Initially, we compared the crude incidence rates of disease among bathers and nonbathers, the crude RRs, and the crude aRs after the 1-week evaluation interval with those after the 3-week interval. After it became obvious from this comparison that there was no additional scientific benefit from using the 3-week interval, all subsequent analyses concentrated on the results obtained within a period of 1 week. Determination of NOAELs. To determine potential NOAELs, we sorted participants by their individual exposure concentration in ascending ascending /as·cend·ing/ (ah-send´ing) having an upward course. ascending progressing to higher levels, usually used in reference to the nervous system. order. We then performed a Pearson's chi-square test Pearson's chi-square test see chi-square test. for every actually occurring concentration to compare the incidence rates among bathers exposed below and above this concentration, and the resulting p-value was recorded. The most probable estimate for a potential NOAEL was considered to be the concentration that revealed the lowest p-value, provided that the following conditions were met: a) the incidence rate among bathers above this concentration was significantly higher than the incidence rate among bathers below this concentration (p < 0.05); b) the incidence rate of bathers below this concentration was not significantly lower than the incidence rate of nonbathers (exclusion of a coincidental co·in·ci·den·tal adj. 1. Occurring as or resulting from coincidence. 2. Happening or existing at the same time. co·in imbalance imbalance /im·bal·ance/ (im-bal´ans) 1. lack of balance, such as between two opposing muscles or between electrolytes in the body. 2. dysequilibrium (2). in the distribution of cases); and c) no expected cell value was less than five (exclusion of unreliable test results). The reliability of this procedure was tested with sets of simulated data with defined dose-response relationships. Control for bias. We tested potential NOAELs against a variety of possible confounding variables A confounding variable (also confounding factor, lurking variable, a confound, or confounder) is an extraneous variable in a statistical or research model that should have been experimentally controlled, but was not. in the total cohort, including age, sex, study location, weather conditions, accidental swallowing of water during the trial, previous or additional water contact or water-related activities, previous diseases, diseases in household members, other household members participating in the study, consumption of prescription drugs prescription drug Prescription medication Pharmacology An FDA-approved drug which must, by federal law or regulation, be dispensed only pursuant to a prescription–eg, finished dose form and active ingredients subject to the provisos of the Federal Food, Drug, , various nutritional factors, consumption of alcohol and tobacco, travel history, socioeconomic status socioeconomic status, n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion. , leisure activities, risk perception, membership in environmental organizations, and background information on recreational water monitoring. Initially, all variables were univariately screened for possible effects in the total final cohort of bathers and nonbathers (Pearson's chi-square tests). Variables showing significant univariate effects (p < 0.05) were considered to be potential confounders of the NOAELs and were further analyzed using a multiple logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors. procedure (effect likelihood ratio test) in which the disease was modeled as the response variable, and the potential NOAEL and the potential confounder con·found tr.v. con·found·ed, con·found·ing, con·founds 1. To cause to become confused or perplexed. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. as model effects. If NOAELs remained significant effects in these tests (p < 0.05), the NOAELs were considered to be unbiased, and the potential confounder was considered to be an independent predictor of disease. In addition, all models were analyzed for possible interaction effects between NOAELs and potential confounding variables by crossing both effects in separate effect likelihood ratio tests. Significant interaction effects (p < 0.05) were recorded but NOAELs were not rejected. We testesd all potential NOAELs and the possible confounding variables one by one to exclude effects caused by a possible collinearity collinearity very high correlation between variables. of the indicator organisms. Stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers. strat·i·fied adj. Arranged in the form of layers or strata. analysis as a possible alternative method to test for confounding confounding when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies. confounding factor was considered inappropriate because of the limited number of cases and the loss of test power that would have been associated with stratification stratification (Lat.,=made in layers), layered structure formed by the deposition of sedimentary rocks. Changes between strata are interpreted as the result of fluctuations in the intensity and persistence of the depositional agent, e.g. . In addition, we compared potential NOAELs with the results of classifying bathers into quartile and quintile categories of exposure concentrations. Potential NOAELs were considered acceptable and unbiased estimates for a true NOAEL if they remained significant model effects (p < 0.05) in all effect likelihood ratio tests and if none of the incidence rates in quartile or quintile categories with upper range limits below the potential NOAEL was significantly higher than the incidence rate of the nonbathers. We evaluated the influence of the accidental swallowing of water and the plausibility of the NOAELs by categorical That which is unqualified or unconditional. A categorical imperative is a rule, command, or moral obligation that is absolutely and universally binding. Categorical is also used to describe programs limited to or designed for certain classes of people. analysis of the incidence rates of disease in bathers exposed below and above NOAELs. Disease definitions. We analyzed data for the following diseases as outcome variables: acute febrile febrile /feb·rile/ (feb´ril) pertaining to or characterized by fever. feb·rile adj. Of, relating to, or characterized by fever; feverish. respiratory infections Noun 1. respiratory infection - any infection of the respiratory tract respiratory tract infection infection - the pathological state resulting from the invasion of the body by pathogenic microorganisms , common cold, ear inflammation ear inflammation 1. Middle ear otitis 2. Otitis , eye inflammation, skin infections or cutireactions, urinary tract infections urinary tract infection (UTI), n infection in one or more of the structures that make up the urinary system. Occurs more often in women and is most commonly caused by bacteria. , and finally three more or less stringent definitions of gastroenteritis: a) definition "GE_UK" according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Kay et al. (1994), b) definition "GE_UK-wf" according to the present study, and c) definition "GE_NL-2" according to van Asperen et al. (1998). We defined a case of gastroenteritis by Boolean combination of symptom variables from the questionnaire as follows (Boolean operators One of the Boolean logic operators such as AND, OR and NOT. in capital letters): GE_UK, (diarrhea AND three or more bowel movements per day) OR vomiting vomiting, ejection of food and other matter from the stomach through the mouth, often preceded by nausea. The process is initiated by stimulation of the vomiting center of the brain by nerve impulses from the gastrointestinal tract or other part of the body. OR (nausea AND fever) OR (indigestion indigestion or dyspepsia, discomfort during or after eating caused by some interference with the normal digestive process. Symptoms include nausea, heartburn, abdominal pain, gas distress, and a feeling of abdominal distention. AND fever) [Note: there were no occurrences of (nausea AND fever) or (indigestion AND fever)]; GE_UK-wf, that is, GE_UK without consideration of stool stool (stldbomacl) feces. rice-water stools the watery diarrhea of cholera. silver stool frequency: diarrhea OR vomiting OR (nausea AND fever) OR (indigestion AND fever) [Note: there were no occurrences of (nausea AND fever) or (indigestion AND fever)]; GE_NL-2, diarrhea OR nausea OR vomiting OR stomach pains. Results Participant flow. The participant flow through each stage of the trial is displayed in Figure 1 in CONSORT CONSORT. A man or woman married. The man is the consort of his wife, the woman is the consort of her husband. format (Moher et al. 2001). The follow-up rate was 91.9%; that is, 2,018 of initially 2,196 participants returned the last questionnaire. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] Cohort characteristics. The age distribution among bathers and nonbathers in the final cohort of 1,981 participants was almost identical. Minimum, 25th percentile percentile, n the number in a frequency distribution below which a certain percentage of fees will fall. E.g., the ninetieth percentile is the number that divides the distribution of fees into the lower 90% and the upper 10%, or that fee level , median, 75th percentile, and maximum in the group of bathers were 4, 14, 23, 39, and 79 years versus 4, 15, 25, 39, and 89 years in the group of nonbathers. The ratios of male to female participants in the group of bathers were 50.8:49.2% and 46.5:53.5% in the group of nonbathers; 1.7% of the participants were preschool children, 33.4% were schoolchildren schoolchildren school npl → écoliers mpl; (at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl schoolchildren school , 11.9% were students, 35.9% were employed, 7.6% were homemakers or retired, 5.2% were unemployed, and 4.3% did not disclose their employment status; 7.1% were members of an environmental organization. Exposure intensity. Only 9% of the participants immersed their heads less often than required, whereas 53% voluntarily did it more often (median, 4; mean, 5.5; range, 0-87). High numbers of head immersions were recorded for some well-trained swimmers who immersed their head with almost every swimming movement. Disease-specific cohorts. Disease-specific cohorts were formed by exclusion of participants who reported disease-specific precursor precursor /pre·cur·sor/ (pre´kur-ser) something that precedes. In biological processes, a substance from which another, usually more active or mature, substance is formed. In clinical medicine, a sign or symptom that heralds another. symptoms at the first or second interview or whose disease status was undefined. Disease-specific precursor symptoms used to evaluate the risk of acquiring gastroenteritis were considered to be any of the following symptoms: fever, loss of appetite loss of appetite Medtalk Anorexia, see there , nausea, vomiting, stomach pains or cramps, indigestion, loose bowel movements, or diarrhea. For the evaluation of other disease risks, specific precursor symptoms were chosen accordingly. The disease status was considered to be undefined if any of the symptom variables that were required to define a case was missing or answered by "not sure." For the analysis of gastroenteritis, 188 participants were excluded because of typical precursor symptoms. In addition, the following numbers of participants were excluded because of their undefined disease status, depending on the definition of gastroenteritis: 36 (GE_UK), 25 (GE_UK-wf), or 26 (GE_NL-2). Parameter-specific cohorts. From the disease-specific cohorts, parameter-specific cohorts were formed by exclusion of data sets with missing microbiological data for each of the microbiological parameters. For the analysis of gastroenteritis, the following number of data sets had to be excluded depending on the kind of fecal indicator organism: none (C. perfringens), 9 (E. coli and intestinal enterococci), or 12 (somatic coliphages). Thus, the parameter-specific cohort sizes for the analysis of gastroenteritis ranged between 1,745 and 1,768. Microbial concentrations in the water. The total number of available sample results per parameter, the median concentrations, and the correlation coefficients Correlation Coefficient A measure that determines the degree to which two variable's movements are associated. The correlation coefficient is calculated as: between the microbiological parameters are listed in Supplemental material Annexes 2 and 3 (http://ehp.niehs.nlh. gov/docs/2005/8115/supplemental.pdf). The concentration ranges for the fecal indicators were as follows: E. coli, 4.7-5,344/100 mL; intestinal enterococci, 3.0-1,504/100 mL; C. perfringens, 9-260/100 mL; somatic coliphages, 10-3,780/100 mL. The lower range limits are equivalent to the lower detection limits. Upper detection limits were not reached in any of the samples. Microbiological quality control The results obtained from the quantitative quality control tests for E. coli and intestinal enterococci using "reference lenticules K" were well within the range of results that could be calculated in a round-robin trial performed by nine European expert labs as described above. The means and the standard deviations In statistics, the average amount a number varies from the average number in a series of numbers. (statistics) standard deviation - (SD) A measure of the range of values in a set of numbers. of the [log.sub.10]-transformed results obtained during the study trials were 2.76 [+ or -] 0.08 E. coli/100 mL and 2.47 [+ or -] 0.09 intestinal enterococci/100 mL (n = 38) compared with 2.77 [+ or -] 0.18 E. coli/100 mL and 2.49 [+ or -] 0.30 intestinal enterococci/100 mL (n = 43) obtained in the round-robin trial. Compliance of the study sites with current European Union standards. In 95.2% of the samples (401 of 421) collected during the 5 trial days, E. coli concentrations were below the imperative value of 2,000/100 mL. Thus, in the time periods during which the trials were performed, the total water quality of all five study locations would have just passed the current European standard (95% of sample results < 2,000/100 mL). Crude incidence rates and RRs of bathers versus nonbathers. Significant or borderline borderline /bor·der·line/ (-lin) of a phenomenon, straddling the dividing line between two categories. borderline significant differences between the crude incidence rates of bathers versus nonbathers could be observed only for gastroenteritis 1 week after exposure and for skin ailments. The incidence rates of gastroenteritis in the nonbathers group ("baseline risks") corresponded well with the three different definitions of astroenteritis, with the most stringent definition (GE_UK) revealing the lowest rate of 1.4% [95% confidence interval confidence interval, n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%. (CI), 0.8-2.4] and the less stringent definitions (GE_UK-wf and GE_NL-2) revealing higher rates of 2.8% (95% CI, 1.9-4.1) and 5.2% (95% CI, 3.9-6.9). The same effect could be observed in the group of bathers. Crude aRs of gastroenteritis slightly decreased after 3 weeks, indicating that virtually all episodes of bathing-associated gastroenteritis occurred within an incubation period of 1 week and that symptoms were less likely to be remembered for a time period of 3 weeks than for a period of 1 week. Further data evaluation therefore focused on the results obtained after 1 week. Detailed figures are displayed in Supplemental material Annex 4 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/ supplemental.pdf). NOAELs, incidence rates, RRs, and aRs. NOAEL estimates that were unbiased by any of the potential confounding variables could be determined for all three definitions of gastroenteritis and all four fecal indicator organisms, whereas the concentrations of aeromonads and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were not associated with gastroenteritis in any case. Detailed descriptions of the 160 tested variables are given in Supplemental material Annex 5 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/ supplemental.pdf). Details of the results of the effect likelihood ratio tests are recorded in Supplemental material, Annexes 6 and 7 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/ supplemental.pdf). NOAELs for nonenteric diseases were either nonexistent non·ex·is·tence n. 1. The condition of not existing. 2. Something that does not exist. non or nondetectable with the available cohort size or within the range of microbial concentrations encountered during the present study; in the case of the common cold, they were confounded by other risk factors. A possible partial association between the concentration of aeromonads and skin ailments (cutireactions) was detectable, but it was overlaid o·ver·laid v. Past tense and past participle of overlay1. by an unknown independent water-related effect; that is, there must have been other causes for cutireactions among bathers that were not associated with the microorganisms monitored in the present study. Because all NOAELs were above the lower detection limits of the microbiological methods, there was no need for application of special techniques to account for censored data below the detection limits. The incidence rates, RRs, and aRs for gastroenteritis below and above the potential NOAELs, the incidence rates and aRs depending on the accidental swallowing of water, and the corresponding raw numbers are listed in detail in Supplemental material Annex 8 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/ supplemental.pdf). Table 1 summarizes NOAELs, RRs, and aRs for all combinations of exposure definitions, definitions of gastroenteritis, and fecal indicator organisms. For exposure definition 1 ("10 min bathing with at least three head immersions"), NOAELs of the most widely used fecal indicators E. coli and intestinal enterococci, for example, ranged between 78 and 180 E. coli/100 mL and between 21 and 24 intestinal enterococci/100 mL. RRs for these two indicators ranged from 1.9 (95% CI, 1.3-2.8) to 3.5 (1.8-7.0), and aRs for bathing above NOAELs ranged from 3.1 to 5.0% depending on the definition of gastroenteritis. Swallowing water compared with not swallowing water resulted in significantly higher aRs above NOAELs than below NOAELs [arithmetic mean aRs: 3.6% vs. 1.3%; p < 0.0001, analysis of variance (ANOVA anova see analysis of variance. ANOVA Analysis of variance, see there )]. In addition, swallowing water below NOAELs never resulted in any significant effect compared with nonbathing, whereas swallowing water above NOAELs always revealed significant effects (all p-values < 0.003), thus providing evidence for true dose-response relationships. The results from classifying bathers into quartiles and quintiles Quintiles Transnational Corp. is a contract research organization which serves the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and healthcare industries. History Quintiles was founded in 1982 by Dennis Gillings and as of 2007 it has 18,000 employees. of the exposure concentrations generally corresponded well with the determined NOAELs. The incidence rates of gastroenteritis in the first quartile and in the first quintile were below the upper limit of the 95% CI of the incidence rate of nonbathers for all 24 combinations of exposure definition, definition of gastroenteritis, and fecal indicator organism. Pearson's chi-square tests did not reveal a significant difference between the incidence rates of nonbathers and the incidence rates in the first quartile or quintile in any of the 24 combinations. On the other hand, all incidence rates within the fourth quartile and, with only one exception, all incidence rates within the fifth quintile were within the 95% confidence intervals of the incidence rates of bathers above NOAELs. For most quartiles and quintiles with concentration ranges above NOAELs, Pearson's chi-square tests or Fisher's exact tests Fisher's exact test a statistical test for association in a two-by-two table based on the exact hypergeometric distribution of the frequencies within the table. revealed significant differences between the incidence rates within the quantiles and the incidence rates among nonbathers. Only the presumptive pre·sump·tive adj. 1. Providing a reasonable basis for belief or acceptance. 2. Founded on probability or presumption. pre·sump NOAEL of 150 somatic coliphages/100 mL for GE_UK and exposure definition 1 was obviously too high and seems to mark the level where the concentration-response curve reaches its maximum rather than the true NOAEL. A complete list with incidence rates of gastroenteritis in quartile and quintile categories of fecal indicator concentrations for the three different definitions of gastroenteritis and the two exposure definitions is given in Supplemental material Annexes 9 and 10 (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/ docs/2005/8115/supplemental.pdf). An example with incidence rates in quartile and quintile categories of microbial exposure concentrations for GE_UK-wf is given in Table 2. The charts in Figure 2 demonstrate a comparison of the incidence rates of gastroenteritis in quartile and quintile categories of E. coli concentrations and the incidence rates below and above the NOAEL depending on the accidental swallowing of water for GE_UK-wf. [FIGURE 2 OMITTED] Influence factors on NOAELs, RRs, and aRs. The NOAELs depended mainly on the definition of exposure, with significantly higher values for exposure definition "single head immersion" (p = 0.009, ANOVA for [log.sub.10]-transformed data). They also depended on the microbiological parameter (p = 0.006). They did not, however, depend on the definition of gastroenteritis (p = 0.32). Like the incidence rates of nonbathers and the incidence rates of bathers exposed below NOAELs, the incidence rates of bathers above NOAELs mainly depended on the definition Of gastroenteritis (p < 0.001). There was no significant difference between the two exposure definitions (p = 0.90) and between the four fecal indicator parameters (p = 0.88). The mean risk attributable to swallowing water above NOAELs was significantly higher than that attributable to swallowing water below NOAELs [3.6 (range, 1.6-8.6) vs. 1.3 (range, -0.4 to 3.8); p < 0.001, ANOVA]. Severity of bathing-associated gastroenteritis. The RRs were higher for the more stringent definitions of gastroenteritis. Mean RRs of bathers above NOAELs versus nonbathers were 3.7 (range, 3.12-4.61) for GE_UK, 2.6 (range, 2.43-2.78) for GE_UK-wf, and 1.9 (range, 1.71-2.33) for GE_NL-2. Mean aRs above NOAELs were 3.8% (range, 3.1-5.2), 4.4% (range, 4.2-5.7), and 4.7% (range, 4.0-8.6), respectively. This demonstrates that most gastroenteritis cases attributable to bathing were cases meeting the most stringent definition of gastroenteritis; that is, they were not simply mild forms of gastroenteritis. Two of the 26 nonbathers (7.7%; 95% CI, 0.9-25.1) who developed gastroenteritis (GE_UK-wf) within 1 week after the trial day consulted a doctor, versus 3 of the 40 bathers (7.6%; 95% CI, 1.6-20.4) who were exposed above NOAEL. Thus, there was no indication that waterborne gastroenteritis was less severe than gastroenteritis acquired through other sources of infection. Discussion and Conclusions The rationale behind the use of indicator organisms since their introduction into water hygiene more than 100 years ago was simply the empirical observation that below certain concentrations--below certain extents of fecal pollution--the disease risk from certain fecal--orally transmittable pathogens was negligible Please [ improve this article] by rewriting this article or section in an . . It has never been assumed that certain concentrations of indicator organisms above these levels are inevitably associated with certain predictable risks. Fecal indicator organisms such as E. coli and intestinal enterococci are part of the normal bacterial flora The bacterial flora is the whole system of bacteria in body cavities that have contact with the outside world. Every place shows another biochemical environment:
In food matrices where they can multiply, microorganisms of fecal origin may be of only little value as indicators of health risks. According to federal law in Switzerland, cheese may contain up to 10,000 E. coli per gram (Eidgenossisches Volkswirtschafrsdepartement 1999). In recreational waters, fecal indicator organisms can be associated with varying amounts and changing kinds of pathogens, depending on the spread of infection at the source of the fecal pollution, and the susceptibility of exposed cohorts is highly variable and hardly predictable. Therefore, the assumption that the risk of acquiring gastrointestinal illness from exposure to certain concentrations of fecal indicator organisms is predictable, as implied by recent publications (Havelaar et al. 2001; Kay et al. 1994, 2004), may be true only for a defined population under the condition of a constant degree of endemicity of always the same kinds of pathogens. It would not, however, be a sufficient basis for the derivation derivation, in grammar: see inflection. of generally applicable microbiological standards for fecal indicator organisms in water. According to Pruss (1998), maximum detectable aRs of gastroenteritis from exposure to recreational water ranged between 0.4 and 27.7% in studies involving freshwater exposure, and from 0.5 to 19.5% in studies involving seawater exposure. A comparison of the results from randomized exposure to flesh water (present results) with the results from randomized exposure to seawater (Kay et al. 1994) confirms that different aRs (4.5% vs. 19.5%) can occur in two different cohorts (Germany vs. United Kingdom) above almost identical NOAELs [24 intestinal enterococci/100 mL in the present study vs. 32 fecal streptococci/100 mL reported by Kay et al. (1994)] even if the type and intensity of exposure are nearly the same (10 min bathing, three or more head immersions). If the pathogen Pathogen Any agent capable of causing disease. The term pathogen is usually restricted to living agents, which include viruses, rickettsia, bacteria, fungi, yeasts, protozoa, helminths, and certain insect larval stages. : indicator ratios in the German and U.K. studies had been completely different, this would most likely have caused larger differences between the NOAELs. The most probable explanation for the differences in the baseline risks (nonbathers) and the aPs (bathers above NOAELs) observed in the German and the U.K. trials are differences in the cohort susceptibilities (Dizer et al. 2005). If the determination of NOAELs is based on observable ob·serv·a·ble adj. 1. Possible to observe: observable phenomena; an observable change in demeanor. See Synonyms at noticeable. 2. differences between groups--nonbathers, bathers below NOAEL, and bathers above NOAEL--then NOAEL is also a function of statistical significance, which is a function of sample size and of the susceptibility status of the population. A possible explanation for the slightly lower NOAELs in the German trial may therefore be the relatively larger cohort size (1,748 vs. 1,216) and the relatively lower background rate of disease in the group of nonbathers (4.8% vs. 9.7%; GE_UK, each within 3 weeks after exposure) and in the group of bathers below NOAEL (4.4% vs. 10.9% among bathers exposed at concentrations of up to 20 intestinal enterococci or fecal streptococci per 100 mL). On the other hand, the lower susceptibility of the German cohort may have partially compensated this effect. If recreational water standards are based on predefined maximum "acceptable" disease risks for bathers (or estimates of the "disease burden" from bathing) as identified in a certain epidemiologic study, the resulting values for "acceptable" concentrations of fecal indicator organisms mainly depend on three variables: a) the NOAEL detected in that study, b) the susceptibility of the cohort in that study, and c) the definition of the disease. NOAELs mainly depend on the pathogen:indicator ratio (the higher the ratio the lower the NOAEL) and on the intensity of exposure (the more intense the exposure the lower the NOAEL). The measurable susceptibility of a cohort depends on the degree of immunity--the percentage of individuals who can be infected--and on the percentage of infected in·fect tr.v. in·fect·ed, in·fect·ing, in·fects 1. To contaminate with a pathogenic microorganism or agent. 2. To communicate a pathogen or disease to. 3. To invade and produce infection in. individuals who develop symptoms, because only symptomatic symptomatic /symp·to·mat·ic/ (simp?to-mat´ik) 1. pertaining to or of the nature of a symptom. 2. indicative (of a particular disease or disorder). 3. disease will be reported. The definition of gastroenteritis (more or less stringent) does not affect the NOAEL; however, it significantly affects the baseline level of gastroenteritis in nonbathers and bathers below the NOAEL, the RR, and the aR. It has been proposed that imperative (legally binding) values for fecal indicator concentrations in recreational water standards be set at a level that limits the aR of acquiring gastroenteritis to 5% and that guide (recommended) values should be set at a level that limits the aR to 3% (Havelaar et al. 2001; Kay et al. 2004). This concept has been applied in the current revision of the European bathing water directive [Commission of the European Communities (CEC (Central Electronic Complex) The set of hardware that defines a mainframe, which includes the CPU(s), memory, channels, controllers and power supplies included in the box. Some CECs, such as IBM's Multiprise 2000 and 3000, include data storage devices as well. ) 2002] using both the NOAEL and the aR depending on the fecal indicator concentration above the NOAEL as determined in the Kay et al. (1994) studies at British seawater bathing sites. These studies revealed an overall aR of approximately 9.5% above a concentration of 26 fecal streptococci/ 100 mL. This is about three times more than we have observed in the German trials above a concentration of 24 intestinal enterocci/ 100 mL using the same definition of gastroenteritis (GE_UK). The reason why the concept of basing water quality standards mainly on aRs is less robust than basing them solely on NOAELs is demonstrated in Figure 3, which shows the effect of different cohort susceptibilities (British vs. German cohort) and different definitions of gastroenteritis (GE_UK, GE_UK-wf, and GE_NL-2) on the "acceptable" level of fecal water pollution if standards are based on predefined "acceptable" aRs (5% or 3%) above an identical NOAEL. The probability density function Probability density function The function that describes the change of certain realizations for a continuous random variable. (PDF) in Figure 3 was calculated using a geometric mean (mathematics) geometric mean - The Nth root of the product of N numbers. If each number in a list of numbers was replaced with their geometric mean, then multiplying them all together would still give the same result. value ([mu]) of 100 intestinal enterococci/100 mL, which is the current European guide value for 90% of the sample results (Council of the European Communities 1976) and also the proposed value for the 95th percentile in the proposal for a revised guideline guideline Medtalk A series of recommendations by a body of experts in a particular discipline. See Cancer screening guidelines, Cardiac profile guidelines, Gatekeeper guidelines, Harvard guidelines, Transfusion guidelines. (CEC 2002). The standard deviation was chosen according to similar calculations that have been used in recommendations of the WHO (Kay et al. 2004). The "disease burden" associated with exposure to recreational water with fecal indicator concentrations that vary according to a PDF with a given [mu] and an SD of [10.sup.0.75] (which can also be characterized char·ac·ter·ize tr.v. character·ized, character·iz·ing, character·iz·es 1. To describe the qualities or peculiarities of: characterized the warden as ruthless. 2. by its corresponding 95th percentile) was calculated according to the following equation: disease burden = [1 - p(cumulative PDF)] x (mean aR above NOAEL). This formula represents a simplification of the WHO concept, which uses a hypothetical Hypothetical is an adjective, meaning of or pertaining to a hypothesis. See:
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED] These calculations demonstrate that, despite the clear effects that we have found, it would be impossible to set imperative values for German freshwater bathing sites based on the results of the present study, and that guide values for compliance at 95th percentile levels of monitoring results for intestinal enterococci would range from approximately 200 to approximately 4,000/100 mL depending on nothing else but different cohort susceptibilities in the German and the U.K. trials and on different definitions of gastroenteritis. If the concept of basing regulatory standards on a maximal max·i·mal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or consisting of a maximum. 2. Being the greatest or highest possible. acceptable aR of 5% and 3% were applied to studies other than those performed by Kay et al. (1994), no imperative or guide values would be necessary at all--for example, for Egyptian beaches (Cabelli 1983) or Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. beaches (Cheung et al. 1990) or bathing areas in any other part of the world where the maximal aRs were < 5% or 3%. Microbiological quality standards are intended to protect the health of those consumers who are not already immune or for some other reason resistant to the pathogens from which they are to be protected. For example, they should provide a certain degree of protection not only for the local population under endemic endemic /en·dem·ic/ (en-dem´ik) present or usually prevalent in a population at all times. en·dem·ic adj. 1. conditions but also for tourists who may have a completely different susceptibility status with respect to a typical pattern of pathogenic path·o·gen·ic or path·o·ge·net·ic adj. 1. Having the capability to cause disease. 2. Producing disease. 3. Relating to pathogenesis. organisms to which local residents are already adapted. In addition, standards should also protect the consumers' health in the situation of epidemics caused by newly introduced pathogens, when even the local population may be extremely susceptible. Therefore, the highly variable cohort susceptibilities that can be observed in epidemiologic studies investigating the risk of acquiring gastroenteritis from recreational water contact should not play a determining role in the setting of standards. Instead, the standards should be based solely on acceptable rates of compliance with guide values that correspond to experimentally and empirically verified NOAELs. In this case, the level of a standard would depend on only one variable, the NOAEL, instead of three: the NOAEL, the cohort susceptibility, and the disease definition. The advantages of choosing guide values in the same order of magnitude A change in quantity or volume as measured by the decimal point. For example, from tens to hundreds is one order of magnitude. Tens to thousands is two orders of magnitude; tens to millions is three orders of magnitude, etc. of NOAELs are manifold manifold In mathematics, a topological space (see topology) with a family of local coordinate systems related to each other by certain classes of coordinate transformations. Manifolds occur in algebraic geometry, differential equations, and classical dynamics. : a) the levels of the guide values would be easy to communicate to the public, because the meaning of a NOAEL is easy to understand; b) different definitions of gastroenteritis and different cohort susceptibilities in certain epidemiologic studies would not automatically result in different standards; and c) the results of individual water samples could be directly compared with the standard (i.e., values below NOAEL vs. values above NOAEL or, e.g., 10 times above NOAEL), whereas such a comparison is not informative if standards are expressed as 95th percentiles of the distribution of microbial concentrations as currently proposed by the European Commission (CEC 2002). We are fully aware that a NOAEL for gastroenteritis is not a natural constant if it is expressed as a concentration of indicator organisms in the water. In an experimental study design, the NOAEL is influenced by the pathogen:indicator ratio, the virulence Virulence The ability of a microorganism to cause disease. Virulence and pathogenicity are often used interchangeably, but virulence may also be used to indicate the degree of pathogenicity. of the pathogens, the amount of water that is ingested in·gest tr.v. in·gest·ed, in·gest·ing, in·gests 1. To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption. See Synonyms at eat. 2. , and, depending on the mathematical method used to determine the NOAEL, possibly the cohort size and the associated power of the statistical analysis. Therefore, the intensity of exposure in experimental studies should be similar to an average bathing activity, and NOAELs determined in experimental studies such as the randomized trials in the United Kingdom (Kay et al. 1994) and in Germany (present results) should be compared with empirical observations before they are used as a basis for standards. According to the results of the present study and the considerations described above, the following values are suggested as reasonable estimates for NOAELs at an average bathing intensity and as a practicable basis for setting recreational water standards: 100 E. coli, 25 intestinal enterococci, 10 somatic coliphages, or 10 C. perfringens per 100 mL. These values are well in accordance Accordance is Bible Study Software for Macintosh developed by OakTree Software, Inc.[] As well as a standalone program, it is the base software packaged by Zondervan in their Bible Study suites for Macintosh. with empirical observations for the concentration of intestinal enterococci and E. coli as demonstrated by the meta-analysis performed by Wade et al. (2003) for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They concluded that there was evidence that the risk of gastrointestinal illness was considerably lower in studies with indicator densities below the freshwater guidelines proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. ) for both enterococci (33/100 mL) and E. coli (126/100 mL). The results of the randomized trials in German flesh waters are also in accordance with the ratio of roughly 1:4 between the guideline values for enterococci and E. coli recommended by the U.S. EPA and are in clear contrast to the ratio of 1:2.5 that is assumed by the European Commission in the current draft directive (CEC 2002). A novel and practicable monitoring system based on compliance rates with NOAELs (calculation of "time-integrated quality scores") was recently proposed (Wiedenmann A and Botzenhart K, unpublished data). Current WHO recommendations and the concept used to derive bathing water standards in the European Union should be reconsidered in light of the results and conclusions from this randomized trial. The results of the present study also demonstrate that C. perfringens and somatic coliphages may be alternative fecal indicators that could be used to set standards for fresh water just as well as E. coli and enterococci. These results can be of interest in regions such as those with tropical climates A tropical climate is a type of climate typical in the tropics. Köppen's widely-recognized scheme of climate classification defines it as a non-arid climate in which all twelve months have mean temperatures above 18°C (64.4 °F). , where E. coli and enterococci may be less reliable as indicator organisms, because there is some indication that these organisms might multiply in such environments (Fujioka and Byappanahalli 2003). For the analysis of the trial results reported in this article, we have applied the most conservative concentration-response model consisting of only a NOAEL, the incidence rate of disease below the NOAEL, and the incidence rate of disease above the NOAEL. The modeling of complex concentration-response functions to only few cases of disease may lead to highly speculative results, especially when the models are extrapolated (Kay et al. 2004). 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(programming) enumeration - enumerated type. of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by Membrane Filtration. Berlin:Beuth Verlag. Dizer H, Wolf S, Fischer M, Lopez-Pila JM, Roske I, Schmidt R, et al. 2005. Die Novelle der EU-Badegewasserrichtlinie--Aspekte der Risikobewertung bei der Grenzwertsetzung. Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz 48:607-614. Eidgenossisches Volkswirtschaftsdepartement. 1999. Verordnung uber die Qualitatssicherung bei der Kasereifung und Kasevorverpackung. SR 916.351.021.4. Amtliche Sammlung des Bundesrechts (AS) 30:2013-2022. Available: http://www. admin.ch/ch/d/as/1999/2013.pdf [accessed 19 August 2005]. European Commission. 2005. Water Quality in the European Union: Bathing Water Quality. Available: http://www.europa. eu.int/water/cgi-bin/bw.pl [accessed 13 August 2005]. Fujioka RS, Byappanahalli MN, eds. 2003. Tropical Water Quality Indicator Workshop. March 2001. Proceedings and Report. 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Detection and Enumeration of of Bacteriophages. Part 2: Enumeration of Somatic Celiphages. Geneva:International Standardization Organization. Kay D, Bartram J, Pruss A, Ashbolt N, Wyer MD, Fleisher J, et al. 2004. Derivation of numerical values for the World Health Organization guidelines for recreational waters. Water Res 38:1296-304. Kay D, Fleisher JM, Salmon RL, Wyer MD, Godfree AF, Zelenauch-Jacquotte Z, et al. 1994. Predicting likelihood of gastroenteritis from sea bathing: results from randomised Adj. 1. randomised - set up or distributed in a deliberately random way randomized irregular - contrary to rule or accepted order or general practice; "irregular hiring practices" exposure. Lancet lancet /lan·cet/ (lan´set) a small, pointed, two-edged surgical knife. lan·cet n. 344:905-910. Moher D, Schulz KF, Altman DG. 2001. The CONSORT statement CONSORT statement a research tool that uses an evidence-based approach to improve the quality of reports of randomized trials. : revised recommendations for improving the quality of reports of parallel group randomized trials. BMC (BMC Software, Inc., Houston, TX, www.bmc.com) A leading supplier of software that supports and improves the availability, performance, and recovery of applications in complex computing environments. Med Res Methodol 1:2. Available: http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/ articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=32201 [accessed 18 August 2005]. Pruss A. 1999. Review of epidemiological studies An Epidemiological study is a statistical study on human populations, which attempts to link human health effects to a specified cause. on health effects from exposure to recreational water. Int J Epidemiol 27:1-9. Schulze E, ed. 1996. Methoden der biologischen Wasseruntersuchung Band 1: Hygienisch-mikrobiologische Wasseruntersuchungen. Jena, Germany:Elsevier Urban und Fischer. Van Asperen I, Medema G, Borgdorff MW, Sprenger MJW MJW Mary Jane Watson (character) , Havelaar AH. 1998. Risk of gastroenteritis among triathletes in relation to faecal fae·cal adj. Chiefly British Variant of fecal. Adj. 1. faecal - of or relating to feces; "fecal matter" fecal pollution of fresh waters. Int J Epidemiol 27:309-315. Wade TJ, Pai N, Eisenberg JNS JNS Journal of Neurosurgery JNS Jump If No Sign JNS Narssaq, Greenland (Airport Code) JNS Journal of Neoplatonic Studies JNS Justification for New Start , Colfurd JM. 2903. Do U.S. Environmental Protection Agency water quality guidelines for recreational water prevent gastrointestinal illness? A systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ en·vi·ron tr.v. en·vi·roned, en·vi·ron·ing, en·vi·rons To encircle; surround. See Synonyms at surround. [Middle English envirounen, from Old French environner Health Perspect 111:1102-1199. WHO. 2003. Guidelines for Safe Recreational-Water Environments. Vol 1: Coastal and Fresh Waters. Geneva:World Health Organization Marketing and Dissemination dissemination Medtalk The spread of a pernicious process–eg, CA, acute infection Oncology Metastasis, see there . Wymer LJ, Dufour AP. 2902. A model for estimating the incidence of swimming-related gastrointestinal illness as a function of water quality indicators. Environmetrics 13:669-678. Address correspondence to A. Wiedenmann, Landratsamt Lorrach, Fachbereich Gesundheit ge·sund·heit interj. Used to wish good health to a person who has just sneezed. [German, health, from Middle High German gesuntheit, from gesunt, healthy , Palmstr. 3, 79537 Lorrach, Germany. Telephone: +49-7621-410-2140. Fax: +49-7621-410-2199. E-mail: albrecht.wiedenmann@arcor.de Supplemental material is available online (http:// ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2005/8115/supplemental.pdf). We thank our international consultants D. Kay, J. Fleisher, and I. Leenen for their invaluable advice on planning the study; S. Gommel, M. Eissler, M. Hirlinger, A. Paul, K. Jungst, U. Luther-Kliegl, W. Langhammer, C. Hock hock: see wine. , P. Kuhner, and C. Fuhrer füh·rer also fueh·rer n. A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant. [German, from Middle High German vüerer, from vüeren, to lead, from Old High German for their dedicated collaboration and their team spirit; and our cooperation partners at the five study locations, especially S. Brockmann, R. Waidmann, H. Gabler, R. von Butler, B. Kiss, C. Holler, B. Majeran, P. Schindler, and S. Schweitzer, for their efforts and support. We are especially indebted in·debt·ed adj. Morally, socially, or legally obligated to another; beholden. [Middle English endetted, from Old French endette, past participle of endetter, to oblige to our 202 project helpers and to the 2,196 volunteers who participated in the trials. We thank D. Blaurock for the linguistic revision of the manuscript. The project was organized by the Institute for General and Environmental Hygiene of the University of Tubingen with the support of a grant from the German Federal Environmental Agency (UFOPLAN project 298 61 503). The authors declare they have no competing financial interests. Received 13 March 2005; accepted 29 September 2005. Albrecht Wiedenmann, (1) Petra Kruger, (2) Klaus Dietz, (3) Juan M. Lopez-Pila, (4) Regine Szewzyk, (4) and Konrad Botzenhart (5) (1) District Government Stuttgart, State Health Office, Stuttgart, Germany; (2) District Government Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany; (3) Department of Medical Biometry biometry /bi·om·e·try/ (bi-om´e-tre) the application of statistical methods to biological phenomena. bi·om·e·try n. The statistical analysis of biological data. Also called biometrics. , University Hospital, Tubingen, Germany; (4) Federal Environmental Agency, Berlin, Germany; (5) Institute of General and Environmental Hygiene, University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany
Table 1. RRs and aRs of bathing above NOAELs versus nonbathing, and
aRs of swallowing water versus not swallowing water below and above
NOAELs by exposure definition, fecal indicator, and definition of
gastroenteritis 1 week after exposure.
Exposure Definition NOAEL
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE (MO/l00 mL)
1 E. coli UK 180
UK-wf 78
NL-2 167
Intestinal enterococci UK 24
UK-wf 21
NL-2 24
C. perfringens UK 13
UK-wf 13
NL-2 13
Somatic coliphages UK 150 (b)
UK-wf 10
NL-2 10
2 E. coli UK 1,453
UK-wf -- (c)
NL-2 2,163
Intestinal enterococci UK 123
UK-wf 123
NL-2 145
C. perfringens UK 38
UK-wf 38
NL-2 36
Somatic coliphages UK 330
UK-wf 50
NL-2 119
Exposure Definition RR,
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE bathing > NOAEL
1 E. coli UK 3.55
UK-wf 2.51
NL-2 1.96
Intestinal enterococci UK 3.20
UK-wf 2.67
NL-2 1.9
C. perfringens UK 3.34
UK-wf 2.61
NL-2 1.86
Somatic coliphages UK 4.61
UK-wf 2.47
NL-2 1.77
2 E. coli UK 4.41
UK-wf --
NL-2 2.33
Intestinal enterococci UK 3.41
UK-wf 2.78
NL-2 1.93
C. perfringens UK 3.12
UK-wf 2.43
NL-2 1.71
Somatic coliphages UK 3.77
UK-wf 2.44
NL-2 1.76
Exposure Definition
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE 95% CI
1 E. coli UK 1.79-7.02
UK-wf 1.55-4.05
NL-2 1.32-2.89
Intestinal enterococci UK 1.64-6.27
UK-wf 1,65-4.32
NL-2 1.30-2.77
C. perfringens UK 1.72-6.51
UK-wf 1.60-4.25
NL-2 1.27-2.73
Somatic coliphages UK 2.1-10.11
UK-wf 1.51-4.04
NL-2 1.21-2.60
2 E. coli UK 2.17-8.96
UK-wf --
NL-2 1.48-3.67
Intestinal enterococci UK 1.74-6.68
UK-wf 1.71-4.51
NL-2 1.31-2.84
C. perfringens UK 1.62-6.03
UK-wf 1.50-3.93
NL-2 1.18-2.47
Somatic coliphages UK 1.87-7.61
UK-wf 1.49-3.98
NL-2 1.18-2.62
Exposure Definition aR (%),
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE bathing > NOAEL
1 E. coli UK 3.6
UK-wf 4.3
NL-2 5.0
Intestinal enterococci UK 3.1
UK-wf 4.7
NL-2 4.7
C. perfringens UK 3.3
UK-wf 4.5
NL-2 4.5
Somatic coliphages UK 5.1
UK-wf 4.2
NL-2 4.0
2 E. coli UK 5.2
UK-wf --
NL-2 8.6
Intestinal enterococci UK 3.7
UK-wf 5.7
NL-2 6.0
C. perfringens UK 3.2
UK-wf 4.6
NL-2 4.6
Somatic coliphages UK 4.2
UK-wf 4.6
NL-2 4.9
aR (%),
Exposure Definition SW [less than or
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE equal to] NOAEL
1 E. coli UK 1.3
UK-wf 1.6
NL-2 1.0
Intestinal enterococci UK 1.3
UK-wf 0.7
NL-2 2.8
C. perfringens UK 0.4
UK-wf 0.9
NL-2 0.8
Somatic coliphages UK 1.3
UK-wf 1.6
NL-2 2.1
2 E. coli UK 1.6
UK-wf --
NL-2 0.5
Intestinal enterococci UK 1.1
UK-wf 1.9
NL-2 3.8
C. perfringens UK -0.4
UK-wf 0.8
NL-2 0.0
Somatic coliphages UK 1.4
UK-wf 1.7
NL-2 0.7
Exposure Definition aR (%),
definition (a) Fecal indicator of GE SW > NOAEL
1 E. coli UK 3.9
UK-wf 2.9
NL-2 3.3
Intestinal enterococci UK 3.7
UK-wf 3.4
NL-2 2.3
C. perfringens UK 4.1
UK-wf 3.3
NL-2 3.5
Somatic coliphages UK 6.7
UK-wf 2.8
NL-2 2.1
2 E. coli UK 5.3
UK-wf --
NL-2 8.6
Intestinal enterococci UK 4.0
UK-wf 2.8
NL-2 1.6
C. perfringens UK 4.1
UK-wf 3.3
NL-2 3.2
Somatic coliphages UK 3.2
UK-wf 2.7
NL-2 3.1
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; GE, gastroenteritis; MO,
microorganisms; SW, swallowing water.
(a) Exposure definitions 1 and 2 as explained in "Materials and
Methods." (b) Value is probably too high because of a second local
minimum of the Pearson's chi-squared p-values. (c) Potential NOAEL
estimate does not fulfill all criteria of validity (incidence rate of
bathers below NOAEL is significantly lowerthan incidence rate of
nonbathers).
Table 2. Incidence rates of gastroenteritis (definition GE_UK-wf) in
quartile and quintile categories of microbial exposure concentrations
for exposure definition 1 ("10 min bathing with at least three head
immersions") 1 week after exposure.
Quartile UL
MO/100
Parameter mL Cases No. IR (%) p-Value (a)
Unexposed 26 921 2.8
E. coli 72 4 207 1.9 0.47
181 11 212 5.2 0.08
379 14 211 6.6 0.007 **
4,600 17 208 8.2 < 0.001 (#)
Intestinal enterococci 14 5 208 2.4 0.74
53 9 212 4.2 0.28
101 14 210 6.7 0.007 **
1,190 18 208 8.7 < 0.001 (#)
C. perfringens 9 6 224 2.7 0.91
18 9 202 4.5 0.23
33 18 211 8.5 < 0.001 (#)
148 13 210 6.2 0.02 *
Somatic coliphages 10 7 302 2.3 0.64
35 9 115 7.8 0.01 *
142 12 212 5.7 0.04 *
3,598 16 206 7.8 < 0.001 (#)
Quintile UL
MO/100
Parameter mL Cases No. IR (%) p-Value (a)
Unexposed 26 921 2.8
E. coli 61 3 166 1.8 0.61
116 6 168 3.6 0.62
245 10 170 5.9 0.04 *
445 12 166 7.2 0.004 **
4,600 15 168 8.9 < 0.001 (#)
Intestinal enterococci 12 3 167 1.8 0.61
27 5 167 3.0 0.80
68 15 169 8.9 < 0.001 (#)
114 7 168 4.2 0.35
1,190 16 167 9.6 < 0.001 (#)
C. perfringens 9 6 224 2.7 0.91
13 4 115 3.5 0.57
22 12 172 7.0 0.006 **
36 14 166 8.4 < 0.001 (#)
148 10 170 5.9 0.04 *
Somatic coliphages 10 7 302 2.3 0.64
11 3 31 9.7 0.06
85 11 167 6.6 0.01
153 10 171 5.8 0.04 *
3,598 13 164 7.9 0.001 **
Abbreviations: IR, incidence rate; MO, microorganisms; UL, upper range
limit.
(a) The p-value was calculated by Pearson s chi-square test or Fisher's
exact test that compared the number of cases among the bathers who were
exposed in one of the given categories of fecal indicator
concentrations with the number of cases among the unexposed
participants (nonbathers). Fisher's exacttest results were used when
an expected cell value was < 5.
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; (#) p < 0.001.
Figure 2. Incidence rates of gastroenteritis (definition GE_UK-wf)
within 1 week after exposure to fresh recreational water in quartile
and quintile categories of E. coli concentrations (A) and incidence
rates below and above the presumed NOAEL of 78 coli/100 ml (B),
depending on the accidental swallowing of water.
Incidence rate of gastroenteritis (%)
Unexposed 26/921 2.8%
< NOAEL - W 2/155 1.3%
< NOAEL + W 3/104 2.9%
> NOAEL - W 17/296 5.7% *
> NOAEL + W 24/279 8.6* **
Note: Table made from bar graph.
- W = participants did not swallow water
+ W = participants swallowed water
* p < 0.05 in a chi-square test or Fisher's exact test comparing the
incidence rate of gastroenteritis in one of the specified exposure
categories with the incidence rate of gastroenteritis in the group of
unexposed participants (nonbathers). ** p < 0.001.
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