Chandra Deb Liton, Jara Manuel, Lanzas Cristina
Department of Population Health and Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA.
One Health. 2023 Jun 14;17:100580. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100580. eCollection 2023 Dec.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the biggest challenges to global public health. To address this issue in the US, governmental agencies have implemented system-wide guidance frameworks and recommendations aimed at reducing antimicrobial use. In particular, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) prohibited the extra-label use of cephalosporins in food animals in 2012 and issued the guidance for industry (GFI) #213 about establishing a framework to phase out the use of all medically relevant drugs for growth promotion in 2012. Also in 2015, the FDA implemented veterinary feed directive (VFD) drug regulations (GFI# 120) to control the use of certain antimicrobials. To assess the potential early effects of these FDA actions and other concurrent antimicrobial stewardship actions on AMR in the food chain, we compared the patterns of the phenotypic (minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and percentage of resistance) and genotypic resistances for selected antimicrobials before and after 2016 across different enteric pathogen species, as reported by the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS). Most of the antimicrobials analyzed at the phenotypic level followed a downward trend in MIC after implementing the guidance. Although, most of those changes were less than one 1-fold dilution. On the other hand, compared to MIC results, the results based on phenotypic resistance prevalence evidenced higher differences in both directions between the pre- and post-guidance implementation period. Also, we did not find relevant differences in the presence of AMR genes between pre- and post-VFD drug regulations. We concluded that the FDA guidance on antimicrobial use has not led to substantial reductions in antimicrobial drug resistance yet.
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)是全球公共卫生面临的最大挑战之一。为解决美国的这一问题,政府机构已实施全系统的指导框架和建议,旨在减少抗菌药物的使用。特别是,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)在2012年禁止在食用动物中额外使用头孢菌素,并于2012年发布了行业指南(GFI)#213,内容是关于建立一个框架以逐步淘汰所有用于促进生长的医用相关药物。同样在2015年,FDA实施了兽药饲料指令(VFD)药物法规(GFI#120)以控制某些抗菌药物的使用。为评估FDA这些行动以及其他同期抗菌药物管理行动对食物链中AMR的潜在早期影响,我们比较了2016年前后不同肠道病原体物种对选定抗菌药物的表型(最低抑菌浓度(MIC)和耐药百分比)和基因型耐药模式,这些数据由国家抗菌药物耐药监测系统(NARMS)报告。在实施该指南后,大多数在表型水平分析的抗菌药物的MIC呈下降趋势。尽管如此,大多数这些变化小于1倍稀释。另一方面,与MIC结果相比,基于表型耐药流行率的结果表明,在指南实施前后期间,两个方向上的差异更大。此外,我们在VFD药物法规实施前后未发现AMR基因存在的相关差异。我们得出结论,FDA关于抗菌药物使用的指南尚未导致抗菌药物耐药性大幅降低。