Water study shows effectiveness of IDEXX Legiolert test

Published: 2-May-2017

Test found to be superior in identifying Legionnaire’s Disease over current methods

IDEXX has announced the publication of a peer-reviewed study which concludes that the IDEXX Legiolert/Quanti-Tray test is superior to the standard method for quantifying Legionella pneumophila, the primary cause of potentially-deadly Legionnaires’ disease.

The results of samples studies by leading water microbiology consultant, David Sartory, were published in the April 2017 issue of Letters in Applied Microbiology and compared the performance of the IDEXX Legiolert/Quanti-Tray most probable number (MPN) method, with the ISO 11731-2 membrane filtration method for the enumeration of L. pneumophila from 100 ml potable water and related samples.

Data from a multi-laboratory study analysed according to ISO 17994 showed that Legiolert/Quanti-Tray yielded, on average, higher counts of L. pneumophila.

The report also quantified the Legiolert medium as having a high specificity of 96·4%, and concluded that the new method represented a significant improvement in the enumeration of L. pneumophila from drinking water-related samples.

“This study clearly demonstrates that Legiolert is an effective test which gives confirmed, quantified results for L. pneumophila quickly, enabling users to identify where there may be a risk of Legionnaires’ disease to vulnerable populations,” said Andrew Headland, senior business manager for IDEXX EMEA.

“The test is much simpler than current traditional methods and removes the need for laborious colony counting or confirmation steps, giving a fast, accurate, and efficient alternative to the more-time-consuming membrane filtration methods.”

Launched in 2016 in the US, the IDEXX Legiolert test is based on a bacterial enzyme detection technology that signals the presence of L. pneumophila through utilisation of a substrate present in the Legiolert reagent.

L. pneumophila cells grow rapidly and reproduce using the rich supply of amino acids, vitamins and other nutrients present in the Legiolert reagent.

Actively growing strains of L. pneumophila use the added substrate to produce a brown colour indicator. Legiolert detects L. pneumophila at one organism in a 100 ml sample within seven days.

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