Stapleton G Sean, Innes Gabriel K, Nachman Keeve E, Casey Joan A, Patton Andrew N, Price Lance B, Tartof Sara Y, Davis Meghan F
Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Center for Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2024 Nov;34(6):917-926. doi: 10.1038/s41370-024-00649-y. Epub 2024 Feb 19.
Antibiotic use in food-producing animals can select for antibiotic resistance in bacteria that can be transmitted to people through contamination of food products during meat processing. Contamination resulting in foodborne illness contributes to adverse health outcomes. Some livestock producers have implemented antibiotic use reduction strategies marketed to consumers on regulated retail meat packaging labels ("label claims").
We investigated whether retail meat label claims were associated with isolation of multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs, resistant to ≥3 classes of antibiotics) from U.S. meat samples.
We utilized retail meat data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) collected during 2016-2019 for bacterial contamination of chicken breast, ground turkey, ground beef, and pork chops. We used modified Poisson regression models to compare the prevalence of MDRO contamination among meat samples with any antibiotic restriction label claims versus those without such claims (i.e., conventionally produced).
In NARMS, 62,338 meat samples were evaluated for bacterial growth from 2016-2019. Of these, 24,446 (39%) samples had label claims that indicated antibiotic use was restricted during animal production. MDROs were isolated from 2252 (4%) meat samples, of which 71% (n = 1591) were conventionally produced, and 29% (n = 661) had antibiotic restriction label claims. Compared with conventional samples, meat with antibiotic restriction label claims had a statistically lower prevalence of MDROs (adjusted prevalence ratio: 0.66; 95% CI: 0.61, 0.73). This relationship was consistent for the outcome of any bacterial growth.
This repeated cross-sectional analysis of a nationally representative retail meat surveillance database in the United States supports that retail meats labeled with antibiotic restriction claims were less likely to be contaminated with MDROs compared with retail meat without such claims during 2016-2019. These findings indicate the potential for the public to become exposed to bacterial pathogens via retail meat and emphasizes a possibility that consumers could reduce their exposure to environmental reservoirs of foodborne pathogens that are resistant to antibiotics.
在食用动物中使用抗生素会促使细菌产生抗生素耐药性,这些细菌可在肉类加工过程中通过食品污染传播给人类。导致食源性疾病的污染会对健康产生不良影响。一些家畜养殖者已实施抗生素使用减少策略,并在受监管的零售肉类包装标签(“标签声明”)上向消费者宣传。
我们调查了零售肉类标签声明是否与从美国肉类样本中分离出多重耐药菌(MDROs,对≥3类抗生素耐药)有关。
我们利用了美国食品药品监督管理局国家抗菌药物耐药性监测系统(NARMS)在2016 - 2019年期间收集的零售肉类数据,用于检测鸡胸肉、火鸡绞肉、牛肉绞肉和猪排的细菌污染情况。我们使用修正泊松回归模型来比较带有任何抗生素限制标签声明的肉类样本与没有此类声明的肉类样本(即传统生产的样本)中MDRO污染的发生率。
在NARMS中,2016 - 2019年共评估了62338份肉类样本的细菌生长情况。其中,24446份(39%)样本带有标签声明,表明在动物生产过程中抗生素使用受到限制。从2252份(4%)肉类样本中分离出了MDROs,其中71%(n = 1591)是传统生产的,29%(n = 661)带有抗生素限制标签声明。与传统样本相比,带有抗生素限制标签声明的肉类中MDROs的发生率在统计学上更低(调整后的发生率比:0.66;95%置信区间:0.61,0.73)。这种关系在任何细菌生长结果中都是一致的。
这项对美国具有全国代表性的零售肉类监测数据库进行的重复横断面分析表明,在2016 - 2019年期间,与没有此类声明的零售肉类相比,带有抗生素限制声明标签的零售肉类被MDROs污染的可能性较小。这些发现表明公众有可能通过零售肉类接触细菌病原体,并强调了消费者有可能减少接触对抗生素耐药的食源性病原体环境储存库的可能性。