Antibiotics in Food Animals - Webmd
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Antibiotics in Food Animals
ByDaniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Health News
Reviewed byLaura J. Martin, MD
Jan. 6, 2012 -- Food animals get 80% of the antibiotics used in the U.S.-- mostly in ways that can lead to the growth of drug-resistant
superbugs.
Emerging drug resistance in bacteria is one of the world's greatest health threats, according to the
CDC, the FDA, the World Health Organization, and a wide range of medical professional
societies.
These groups cite "strong evidence" that many of these hard-to-treat germs arise in food animalsand spread to humans. For this reason, the FDA argues strongly against unwise -- "injudicious" -- use of antibiotics in livestock. Yet over 80% of animal antibiotics are used in these ways.
In January 2012, the FDA prohibited some uses of the cephalosporin class of antibiotics in foodanimals. But these antibiotics make up less than a fraction of 1% of the 15,000 tons of antibiotics
used in U.S. food animals each year.
This raises important questions. Here are WebMD's answers.
Why are antibiotics used in food animals?
There are two main reasons: To promote animal health, and to make animals grow faster.
The FDA has no problem with the antibiotics used to treat disease in animals. And it has no
problem with antibiotics used under the direct supervision of a veterinarian who is treating
specific animals.
But over 80% of antibiotics used in food animals is put into their feed or water by livestock
producers, almost always on a herd-wide basis. This makes animals put onweightfaster even ifthey don't eat more food.
Such "production use" of antibiotics is what the FDA, in its June 2010 guidance to the industry,deemed unwise or "injudicious."
How can antibiotics given to animals create drug-resistant germs?
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If you get an antibiotic prescription from your doctor, you'll be warned to take every single one
of the pills exactly as prescribed. That's because the last few pills mop up the most drug-resistantgerms. If you take too low a dose, the most resistant germs remain.
The same thing happens in animals. Veterinarians treat sick animals with appropriate doses of
antibiotics.
But when antibiotics are used to make animals grow faster, they are given at low doses over long
periods of time. That's a recipe for growing drug resistant bacteria in food animals.
Can drug-resistant bacteria in food animals find their way to humans?
There are some researchers, such as an expert panel of the Institute of Food Technologists, who
say the odds are low that any of these bugs will find their way into humans. But in testimony
before Congress, the USDA, the FDA, and the CDC all said that the use of antibiotics in food
animals leads to infections with drug resistant bacteria to humans.
And in a letter to Congress, 14 health groups -- including the American Medical Association and
the American Academy of Pediatrics -- said "overuse and misuse of important antibiotics in foodanimals must end, in order to protect human health."
The World Health Organization has also warned that overuse of antibiotics in food animals canlead to drug-resistant infections in people.
In January 2012, the FDA banned certain uses of cephalosporin antibiotics in food animalseffective April 5, 2012.
The ruling prohibits giving food animals the kinds of cephalosporins used to treat disease inhumans or in pets. Exceptions allow off-label use by veterinarians to treat specific diseases, and
allow the use of an older cephalosporin called cephapirin, which is not used in humans.
Cephalosporins are not one of the antibiotics used to increase animal growth.
Cephalosporins are important humandrugsintroduced in 1964. They are often used to treat
pneumonia. Cephalosporins are also used to treatear,skin, urinary tract, and other infections.
In 2010, U.S. meat and poultry producers used 27 tons of cephalosporins. That sounds like a lot.
But it's only a fraction of the 14,600 tons of antibiotics used in food animals that year.
One consumer group called the FDA action a step forward -- but only a baby step.
Will the FDA ban use of other antibiotics in food animals?
There is no indication that the FDA plans to ban food-animal use of other antibiotics already
approved for such uses.
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Antibiotics have been used for what the FDA now calls "injudicious uses" since the 1950s. In the
now famous "Swann Report," U.K. researchers in 1969 concluded that feeding low-doseantibiotics to animals posed a health risk to humans.
The U.S. government in 1970 formed its own task force to look at the issue. Eventually -- in
1977 -- the FDA issued a formal finding that all animal use of penicillins and low-dose animaluse of tetracyclines should be banned.
But the FDA never acted on this finding. Environmental groups filed a lawsuit to force FDA to
act. The FDA asked for more time. On Dec. 22, 2011, the FDA finally withdrew its 1977
finding.
Meanwhile, in 1999 and in 2005 environmental groups filed citizen petitions demanding that the
FDA ban non-health-related antibiotic use in food animals. In November 2011, the FDA issued astatement saying it was "concerned" about injudicious food-animal use of antibiotics -- but that
the petitions were denied.
What is the FDA doing about its concerns over antibiotic use in food animals?
The FDA says it takes too long and costs too much to formally ban unwise use of antibiotics infood animals. Instead, in a formal response to the citizen petition to ban such use, the FDA said it
would ask the food industry to voluntarily stop "production use" of antibiotics.
That strategy is outlined in an unusual "draft guidance to industry" issued in June 2010 but not
yet made final. Entitled "The Judicious Use of Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in
Food-Producing Animals," the paper chronicles over 40 years of scientific and government
reports linking antibiotic use in food animals to drug-resistant infections in humans.
The guidance stresses two main principles:
Antibiotics important to humans should be used in food animals only when necessary forthe animals' health.
Use of these antibiotics in food animals should require the oversight of a veterinarian.But the document makes it clear that the FDA expects industry to follow this guidancevoluntarily. How has it worked so far?
The FDA tells WebMD that it hasn't worked yet because the guidance isn't yet final.
"There is no estimated time frame, but moving forward with strategies for implementing the
recommendations outlined in the draft guidance is a priority for the agency," the FDA wrote inan email to WebMD in January 2012. "FDA intends to finalize the draft guidance (Guidance
#209) in the near future as well as issue additional, more detailed guidance on implementing the
recommendations."
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Avinash Kar, a spokesman for the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of the environmental
groups that had petitioned the FDA, is dubious.
"The FDA have followed the strategy of voluntary action by industry for the last three-and-a-half
decades. We don't see it working better now," Kar tells WebMD.
The American Meat Institute, which represents the food-animal industry, declined WebMD'srequest for comment.