Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Public health consequences of macrolide use in food animals: a deterministic risk assessment.
- Journal:
- Journal of food protection
- Year:
- 2004
- Authors:
- Hurd, H Scott et al.
- Affiliation:
- Hurd-Health Consulting · United States
Plain-English summary
This study looked at how the use of certain antibiotics in food animals, specifically tylosin and tilmicosin, might affect human health by potentially leading to antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The researchers created a model to assess the risk of illness from these bacteria that could come from eating meat from treated animals. They found that the chances of humans experiencing treatment failure due to these resistant bacteria are extremely low, with a risk of less than 1 in 10 million for one type of bacteria and about 1 in 3 billion for another. Overall, the findings suggest that using these antibiotics in food animals poses a very low risk to human health.
Abstract
The potential impact on human health from antibiotic-resistant bacteria selected by use of antibiotics in food animals has resulted in many reports and recommended actions. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Veterinary Medicine has issued Guidance Document 152, which advises veterinary drug sponsors of one potential process for conducting a qualitative risk assessment of drug use in food animals. Using this guideline, we developed a deterministic model to assess the risk from two macrolide antibiotics, tylosin and tilmicosin. The scope of modeling included all label claim uses of both macrolides in poultry, swine, and beef cattle. The Guidance Document was followed to define the hazard, which is illness (i) caused by foodborne bacteria with a resistance determinant, (ii) attributed to a specified animal-derived meat commodity, and (iii) treated with a human use drug of the same class. Risk was defined as the probability of this hazard combined with the consequence of treatment failure due to resistant Campylobacter spp. or Enterococcus faecium. A binomial event model was applied to estimate the annual risk for the U.S. general population. Parameters were derived from industry drug use surveys, scientific literature, medical guidelines, and government documents. This unique farm-to-patient risk assessment demonstrated that use of tylosin and tilmicosin in food animals presents a very low risk of human treatment failure, with an approximate annual probability of less than 1 in 10 million Campylobacter-derived and approximately 1 in 3 billion E. faecium-derived risk.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15151237/