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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Retrospective analysis of Austrian health recording data of antibiotic or nonantibiotic dry-off treatment on milk yield, somatic cell count, and frequency of mastitis in subsequent lactation.

Journal:
Journal of dairy science
Year:
2018
Authors:
Wittek, T et al.
Affiliation:
University Clinic for Ruminant

Plain-English summary

This study looked at how using antibiotics when dairy cows are dried off affects their milk production, cell counts in their milk, and the occurrence of mastitis (an infection of the udder) in the next lactation period. Researchers analyzed data from over 88,000 lactations, comparing cows that received antibiotics at dry-off with those that did not. They found that cows treated with antibiotics produced more milk in their next lactation, but there was no significant difference in the number of mastitis cases between the two groups. The study suggests that farmers are starting to use a more selective approach to antibiotic treatment based on milk yield and other factors, but it also notes that clear guidelines for when to use antibiotics still need to be established. Overall, while antibiotic treatment improved milk yield, it did not significantly reduce mastitis rates in the following lactation.

Abstract

Typically, dairy cows are dried off at the end of lactation. During the dry period, intramammary infections may be cured or persist, and new infections may occur. Traditionally, antibiotics (AB) have been used at dry-off. However, blanket antibiotic dry-off treatment may no longer be justifiable and, recently, selective use of antibiotics at dry off has been proposed and different decision criteria suggested. The objective of the study was to evaluate cows receiving antibiotic treatment at dry off (AB group) compared with cows dried off without antibiotics (non-AB group) using a large data set. Primary outcome parameters were milk yield, somatic cell count (SCC), and frequency of mastitis in the subsequent lactation. Additionally, we aimed to calculate cut-off values to determine, at the cow level, whether antibiotic dry-off treatment is indicated. A data set of 88,534 lactations was used; 27,723 cows were dried off using antibiotics (AB group; 31.3%) and 60,811cows were dried off without antibiotics (non-AB group; 68.7%). Milk yield in previous and subsequent lactations was higher in the AB group. Cows in the AB group produced, on average, 91 kg more milk in the subsequent lactation. The average SCC during the final 90 d of the previous lactation and at dry-off did not differ between the 2 groups. The probability of drying off using antibiotics increased almost linearly with higher milk yield and with higher SCC. The use of antibiotics resulted in an average decrease in SCC of 1,500 cells/mL in the subsequent lactation. The frequency of clinical mastitis during the previous lactation was higher in the AB group than in the non-AB group. Independently of the dry-off treatment, this difference remained in the subsequent lactation within 90 d in milk. The use of antibiotics at dry-off had no significant effect on the frequency of mastitis within 90 d in milk of the subsequent lactation. The study indicates that Austrian farmers and veterinarians are applying selective dry-cow treatment using milk yield and, to a lesser extent, SCC and mastitis frequency, for decision-making. However, even though a large data set was used, cut-off values with sufficient diagnostic value for selective dry-cow treatment could not be identified. It is likely that cut-off values must be identified at the herd level or in combination with additional parameters (e.g., results of bacterial culture).

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29153520/