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Microbial Risk Assessment -1 ENVR 421 Mark D. Sobsey Spring, 2008 WHO Health-Risk Based Framework: Application to WHS These principles apply to all types of WSH activities WHO Health-Risk Based Framework: Application to WHS • A risk-based framework • Source-to-consumer management approach to protection from exposure to environmental agents • Establishes health based-targets for control (specific microbes and chemicals) • Sets acceptable level of risk appropriate to setting and population • Helps establish and carry out Management Plans (Safety Plans) to achieve control • Includes independent surveillance • Is an integrated, proactive approach • Consistent across, compatible with and applicable to all WSH measures Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment: The Definition Applications of the principles of risk assessment to the estimation of the consequences from anticipated or actual exposure to infectious microorganisms Exposure, Level of Protection and Microbial Risk: The Relationship = Confidence Region or Interval Risk Exposure Level of Protection (e.g., technologic control) Important Differences Between Microbial & Chemical Risks: The Microbial • A single microbe (one unit) is infectious and can cause dramatic effects; magnitude of effects not always related to exposure level • Microbes multiply in a host (increases adverse effects) – Can spread to different compartments (organs & tissues) in host • Microbes multiply in environmental media (some microbes) • Microbes are capable of secondary spread – Can first infect a host from an environmental route of exposure (water, food, etc.) – Can then spread to other hosts by person-to-person transmission • Some microbes cause a wide range (spectrum) of adverse effects • Microbes can change: mutate, evolve, adapt, change gene expression, etc. Important Differences Between Microbial & Chemical Risks: the Chemical • Unique and specific structures that define (predict) activities • Many molecules may be required for an effect; gradation of effects • Do not multiply/reproduce • No secondary spread • Accumulation and compartmentalization • Metabolism and chemical reactivity • Detoxification • Threshold (no adverse effect level) • Cumulative effects • Magnitude of exposure influences magnitude of adverse effects and their appearance/manifestation • Distinctive health effects based on chemical reactions with specific molecules, tissues and organs Quantitative Risk Assessment for Agents from Environmental Sources: a Conceptual Framework Risk Communication Adapted from: National Academy of Sciences - National Research Council framework by US EPA and the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) RISK ASSESSMENT FOR ENVIRONMENTALLY TRANSMITTED PATHOGENS: ILSI/EPA PARADIGM PROBLEM FORMULATION: HAZARD IDENTIFICATION CHARACTERIZATION OF EXPOSURE EFFECTS CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN HEALTH EFFECTS RISK CHARACTERIZATION Risk Management and Communication ILSI/EPA Risk Assessment Framework and Steps: Analysis Phase QRA for Agents from Environmental Sources: Steps in the Conceptual Framework Conducting Hazard Identification for Microbes • Identify microbe(s) that is (are) the causative agent(s) of disease • Develop/identify diagnostic tools to: – identify symptoms – identify infection – isolate causative microbe in host specimens – identify causative microbe in host specimens • Understand the disease process from exposure to infection, illness (pathophysiology) and death • Identify transmission routes • Identify transmission scenarios Conducting Hazard Identification for Microbes • Assess virulence factors and other properties of the microbe responsible for disease, including life cycle • Identify and apply diagnostic tools to determine incidence and prevalence in populations and investigate disease outbreaks • Develop models (usually animals) to study disease process and approaches to treatment • Evaluate role of immunity in overcoming/preventing infection and disease and possible vaccine development • Study epidemiology of microbe associated with exposure scenarios QRA for Agents from Environmental Sources: Steps in the Conceptual Framework Exposure Assessment Purpose: determine the quantity or dose Dose = number, quantity or amount of microorganisms corresponding to a single exposure (e.g., by ingestion) • Average or typical dose – A measure of central tendency (mean or median) • Distribution of doses – microbe quantity varies in time and space – described as a probability or frequency distribution – a probability density function CHARACTERIZATION OF EXPOSURE - ELEMENTS INCLUDED IN PATHOGEN CHARACTERIZATION: OCCURRENCE • Temporal distribution, duration and frequency • Concentration in food or environmental media • Spatial distribution – clumping, aggregation, association with particles, clustering • Niche – ecology and non-human reservoirs: Where are they in the environment and what other host harbors them? – potential to multiply/survive in specific media CHARACTERIZATION OF EXPOSURE - ELEMENTS INCLUDED IN PATHOGEN CHARACTERIZATION: OCCURRENCE • Survival, persistence, and amplification • Seasonality • Meteorological and climatic events • Presence of control or treatment processes – reliability and variability of processes • Indicators/surrogates for indirect evaluation – predictive of pathogen ELEMENTS CONSIDERED IN PATHOGEN CHARACTERIZATION • Virulence and pathogenicity of the microorganism • Pathologic characteristics and diseases caused • Survival and multiplication of the microorganism • Resistance to control or treatment processes • Host specificity • Infection mechanism and route; portal of entry • Potential for secondary spread • Taxonomy and strain variation • Ecology and natural history Pathogen Characteristics or Properties Favoring Environmental Transmission KEY: Multiple sources and high endemicity (continued presence) in humans, animals and environment • High concentrations released into or present in environmental media (water, food, air, etc.) • High carriage rate in human and animal hosts • Asymptomatic carriage in non-human hosts • Ability to proliferate in water and other media • Ability to adapt to and persist in different media or hosts • Seasonality and climatic effects • Natural and anthropogenic sources Microbe Levels in Environmental Media Vary Over Time Occurrence of Giardia Cysts in a Water: Cumulative Frequency Distribution Pathogen Characteristics or Properties Favoring Environmental Transmission • Ability to persist or proliferate in environment • Ability to survive or penetrate treatment processes • Stable environmental forms – spores, cysts, oocysts, stable outer viral layer (protein coat), bacterial capsule (outer polysaccharide layer), etc. • Resistance to biodegradation, heat, cold (freezing), drying, dessication, UV light, ionizing radiation, pH extremes, etc. • Resists proteases, amylases, lipases and nucleases – Possesses DNA repair mechanisms and other injury repair processes • Colonization, biofilm formation, resting stages, protective stages, parasitism – Spatial distribution – Aggregation, particle association, intercellular accumulation, etc. Virulence Properties of Pathogenic Bacteria Favoring Environmental Transmission Virulence properties: structures or chemical constituents that contribute to pathophysiology • Outer cell membrane of Gram negative bacteria: an endotoxin (fever producer) • Exotoxins: release toxic chemicals • Pili: for attachment and effacement to cells and tissues • Invasins: to facilitate cell invasion • Effacement factors • Spores • highly resistant to physical and chemical agents • very persistent in the environment • plasmids, lysogenic bacteriophages, etc. Pathogen Characteristics or Properties Favoring Environmental Transmission Genetic properties favoring survival and pathogenicity • Double-stranded DNA or RNA • DNA repair • Ability for genetic exchange, mutation and selection –recombination –plasmid exchange, transposition, conjugation, etc. –point mutation –reassortment –gene expression control • Virulence properties: expression, acquisition, exchange • Antibiotic resistance Role Emergence and Selection of New Microbial Strains on Exposure Risks • Antigenic changes in microbes can create changes that overcome immunity, increasing risks of re-infection or illness – Antigenically different strains of microbes appear in hosts or are created in the environment; are selected for over time and space – Constant selection of new strains by antigenic shift and drift – Genetic recombination, reassortment , bacterial conjugation, bacteriophage infection or bacteria and point mutations • Antigenic Shift in viruses: – Major change in virus genetic composition by gene substitution or replacement (e.g., reassortment); Influena A viruses (e.g., H?N?) Role Emergence and Selection of New Microbial Strains on Exposure Risks • Antigenic Drift: – Minor changes in genetic composition, often by mutation involving specific codons in existing genes (point mutations) – A single point mutation can greatly alter microbial virulence • Microbial mimicking of host antigens; e.g. malaria – Antigens expressed by pathogen resemble host antigens; they can change Other Pathogen Characteristics or Properties Favoring Environmental Transmission • Ability to Cause Infection and Illness – Low infectious dose – High probability of infection and illness from exposure to one or a few microbes • Infects by multiple routes – Ingestion: gastrointestinal (GI) – Inhalation: respiratory – Cutaneous: skin – eye – Other routes CHARACTERIZATION OF EXPOSURE: ELEMENTS CONSIDERED IN EXPOSURE ANALYSIS • Identification of water, food or other media/vehicles of exposure • Units of exposure (e.g number of cells) • Routes of exposure and transmission potential • Size of exposed population • Demographics of exposed population • Spatial and temporal nature of exposure (single or multiple; intervals) • Behavior of exposed population • Treatment (e.g. of water), processing (e.g., of foods), and recontamination QRA for Agents from Environmental Sources: Steps in the Conceptual Framework