| Literature DB >> 36014044 |
Abstract
The use of antimicrobials for the treatment of food-producing animals is increasingly scrutinized and regulated based on concerns about maintaining the efficacy of antimicrobials used to treat important human diseases. Consumers are skeptical about the use of antibiotics in dairy cows, while dairy producers and veterinarians demonstrate ambivalence about maintaining animal welfare with reduced antimicrobial usage. Antimicrobial stewardship refers to proactive actions taken to preserve the efficacy of antimicrobials and emphasizes the prevention of bacterial diseases and use of evidence-based treatment protocols. The ability to broadly implement antimicrobial stewardship in the dairy industry is based on the recognition of appropriate antimicrobial usage as well as an understanding of the benefits of participating in such programs. The most common reason for the use of antimicrobials on dairy farms is the intramammary treatment of cows affected with clinical mastitis or at dry off. Based on national sales data, intramammary treatments comprise < 1% of overall antimicrobial use for food-producing animals, but a large proportion of that usage is a third-generation cephalosporin, which is classified as a highest-priority, critically important antimicrobial. Opportunities exist to improve the use of antimicrobials in dairy practice. While there are barriers to the increased adoption of antimicrobial stewardship principles, the structured nature of dairy practice and existing emphasis on disease prevention provides an opportunity to easily integrate principles of antimicrobial stewardship into daily veterinary practice. The purpose of this paper is to define elements of antimicrobial stewardship in dairy practice and discuss the challenges and potential benefits associated with these concepts.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotics; antimicrobial resistance; antimicrobial stewardship; dairy; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 36014044 PMCID: PMC9415423 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10081626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Active ingredients of antimicrobials approved for the treatment of dairy cattle in the United States.
| Usage | Active Ingredient of Products Approved for Specific Indications | |
|---|---|---|
| Intramammary treatment and control of mastitis | ||
| Systemic a,b treatments | ||
| Calves a,b and replacement heifers | ||
Notes: a Additional antimicrobials (e.g., lincomycin, spectinomycin, gentamycin, and tylosin) may occasionally be prescribed for extra label usage by an attending veterinarian when no labeled products are expected to be efficacious, but extended withholding periods are often required; b most products are labeled for the treatment of bovine respiratory disease and/or foot rot.
Comparison of antimicrobial usage in mature dairy cows among selected studies that reported using defined daily doses (converted to defined daily doses per cow per year).
| Pol & Ruegg | Saini et al. [ | Gonzalez Pereyra et al. [ | Kuipers et al. [ | Stevens et al. [ | de Campos et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | 2007 | 2012 | 2015 | 2016 | 2016 | 2021 |
| Country | WI, USA | Canada | Argentina | Netherlands | Belgium | WI USA |
| Data Collection method | On-farm survey | Packaging audit | On-farm survey | Retrieval of sales data | Packaging audit | Farm visit and record analysis |
| Herd (n) | 40 1 | 89 | 18 | 94 | 57 | 40 |
| Lactating Cows/herd | 197 | 69 | 219 | 110 | 69 | 1163 |
| DDD/cow/year | 5.4 | 5.2 | 5.2 | 5.5 | 7.6 | 6.1 |
| % IMM route 2 | 66% | 35% | 85% | 72% | 63% | 78% |
NOTES: 1 20 conventional and 20 organic herds; 2 IMM = intramammary route of administration.
Figure 1Antimicrobial usage estimated as defined daily doses (DDD) per cow per year on 40 large WI dairy farms in 2017 by indication. Adapted from [14].
Principles and elements of AMS that are part of routine veterinary practice on many dairy farms.
| Element of AMS | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| AABP, 2022 [ | Weese et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Core Principle of Judicious Use 1 | Examples of Common Practices Related to Antimicrobial Stewardship | Leadership; Drug Expertise; Tracking AMU; Reporting and Action | Responsibility; Reduction; Replacement; Refinement; Review |
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Perform housing assessment Reduce stocking density Modify Gram-negative core antigen vaccine Modify fresh cow environment Change milking order Evaluate and change colostrum harvest protocol Test for failure of passive transfer Evaluate calf and heifer housing Evaluate heat stress control Begin daily herd walk-through Evaluate and revise biosecurity programs Evaluate and revise vaccination programs Review use of shared versus individual needles | ||
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Begin monthly SCC testing Use CMT at dry off to identify infected quarters Use SCC as part of clinical mastitis treatment protocol Use SCC as part of selective dry cow therapy program Review disease definitions Use on-farm culture to direct clinical mastitis treatment protocols Begin calf health scoring Recording severity score for clinical mastitis Begin fore-stripping (detection of clinical mastitis) | ||
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Use “watchful waiting” for some non-severe mastitis Evaluate selective Dry cow therapy Evaluate use of internal teat sealants Develop drug inventory control program Requires 2 signatures for culling cows Change protocol for cows to leave hospital/sell milk | ||
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Plan a selective dry cow therapy program Review (change) routine fresh cow treatments Review/revise existing treatment protocols Reduce use of extralabel treatments Review reasons for using antibiotics Review evidence for duration of antibiotic therapy Weigh cattle before dosing injectable antibiotics Review or change criteria for use of antibiotics Review or change antibiotics used for treatment Compare cost of treatment protocols Read labels of all drugs on farm Identify compliance gaps for treatment protocols Schedule quarterly review of treatment protocols Schedule training time of vet with animal health managers | ||
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Perform residue tests on milk of fresh cows Evaluate transition cow health Change disease recording system Review health records to estimate disease rates Review calf health records Conduct quality assurance review of on-farm culture results Evaluate outcomes of mastitis treatment program Review cost of drugs Review disease rates in calves/heifers Determine death and culling rates for animals Benchmark AMU | ||
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Assign fresh cow manager Provide training for on-farm culture program Change personnel making treatment decision Limit access to antibiotics Have veterinarian reassess/review current VFD Begin routine training program for employees | ||
NOTES: 1 adapted from [68].
Figure 2Proposed 4-month cycle integrating principles of antimicrobial stewardship into dairy practice using management of mastitis as an example.