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Bacteria in water supplies driving up healthcare spending, report finds

Between 1991 and 2006, more than 617,000 hospitalizations tied to "premise plumbing pathogens" resulted in around $9 billion in Medicare payments.
By Jeff Lagasse , Editor

A new analysis of 100 million Medicare records from U.S. adults aged 65 and older reveals rising healthcare costs for infections associated with disease-causing bacteria, such as Legionella, which can live inside drinking water distribution systems, including household and hospital water pipes.

A team led by researchers from the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University and Tufts University School of Medicine found that between 1991 and 2006, more than 617,000 hospitalizations related to three common "premise plumbing pathogens" resulted in around $9 billion in Medicare payments -- an average of $600 million a year.

The costs may now exceed $2 billion for 80,000 cases per year, the study authors wrote. Antibiotic resistance, which can be exacerbated by aging public water infrastructure, was present in between 1 and 2 percent of hospitalizations, and increased the cost per case by between 10 to 40 percent. The study was published Monday in the Journal of Public Health Policy.

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"Premise plumbing pathogens can be found in drinking water, showers, hot tubs, medical instruments, kitchens, swimming pools -- almost any premise where people use public water," said lead study author Elena Naumova, professor at the Friedman School and director of the Initiative for the Forecasting and Modeling of Infectious Disease at Tufts University, in a statement. "The observed upward trend in associated infections is likely to continue, and aging water distribution systems might soon be an additional reservoir of costly multidrug resistance. This is a clear call for deepened dialogue between researchers, government agencies, citizens, and policy makers, so that we can improve data sharing and find sustainable solutions to reduce the public health risks posed by these bacteria."

State and federal oversight has ensured generally safe public drinking water in the United States. However, premise plumbing systems -- the pipes and fixtures in homes and buildings that transport water after delivery by public water utilities -- are largely unregulated, which the authors said can lead to inconsistent monitoring and reporting of potentially harmful deficiencies.

This is highlighted by the ongoing crisis in Flint, Michigan, where a water source change, aging pipes, and lack of corrosion control not only exposed thousands of children to elevated lead levels in drinking water, but is also thought to have triggered an outbreak of Legionnaire's disease that led to 10 deaths.

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Opportunistic premise plumbing pathogens, such as Legionella pneumophila, the bacteria that causes Legionnaire's disease, can thrive in low-nutrient conditions and grow as biofilms on the inner surfaces of pipes, according to the study. Biofilms allow these pathogens to resist disinfectants and environmental stressors, and aid in the spread of antibiotic resistance and virulent genes. As water distribution systems age, their susceptibility to contamination increases. But few large-scale studies have examined the economic and public health burden of these bacteria.

To investigate, Naumova and her colleagues analyzed 100 million medical claims from 1991 through 2006 from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which provides exhaustive coverage of Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older. The team focused on hospitalizations related to three opportunistic premise plumbing pathogens: Legionella pneumophila, Mycobacterium avium, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which can cause a range of serious respiratory, systemic or localized infections, particularly in vulnerable populations such as the elderly or immunocompromised.

Based on clinical diagnostic codes, reported cases for all three infections totaled 617,291, with the majority, 560,504, due to pneumonia caused by Pseudomonas and related bacteria. Legionnaire's disease and Mycobacteria infections accounted for 7,933 and 48,854 cases, respectively. On average, each hospitalization represented $45,840 in Medicare charges and $14,920 in payments. Antibiotic resistance, recorded in a little under two percent of cases, increased the average costs to $60,870 in Medicare charges and $16,690 in payments per case.

Over the past decade, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported a substantial increase in incidence of opportunistic premise plumbing pathogens, with Pseudomonas alone accounting for 51,000 hospitalizations per year with more than 6,000 multi-drug resistant infections in 2011. The annual costs for these pathogens may now exceed a total of $2 billion for more than 80,000 cases per year, as increased antibiotic resistance leads to greater hospital charges, longer lengths of stay, and increased risk of complications.

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Antibiotic resistance is likely underreported, the study said, and this number is a conservative estimate for the Medicare population based on the study findings and reported data on hospitalization costs per case.

The authors cautioned that their data cannot draw conclusions about the percentage of infections directly caused by contaminated water. The link between aging water distribution systems and drug resistance is highly plausible, but has yet to be firmly established, they say.

A 2010 report from the national Waterborne Disease and Outbreak Surveillance System, a partnership between the CDC, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, urged serious attention to be paid to the growing number of outbreaks associated with premise plumbing deficiencies in public water systems. Yet budgets for state and federal water regulators have decreased. In 2013, the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators reported that "federal officials had slashed drinking-water grants, 17 states had cut drinking-water budgets by more than a fifth, and 27 had cut spending on full-time employees," with "serious implications for states' ability to protect public health."

Twitter: @JELagasse