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InFocus

Antimicrobial resistance in pig production

Coordinated, rapid responses could be required on a global scale to tackle emerging antimicrobial resistance threats

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is not a new topic to anyone involved in livestock and food production, and there is a wealth of information raising awareness and imparting knowledge about how to tackle the issue, plus many examples of government interventions and NGO and industry-led initiatives.

The aim of this article, however, is to highlight the significance of the extraordinary mobility and potency of horizontally transmissible genetic elements of antimicrobial resistance (also called antimicrobial resistant genes, or ARGs), and the necessity for coordinated and rapid global responses to new and emerging threats. ARGs do not respect geographical, political or bacterial species boundaries. They spread very widely and rapidly, and can be found in all bacteria, not just the pathogenic ones. This reservoir of transmissible resistance is known as the “resistome”.

FIGURE (1) The top ten global producers of pork for 2017 and 2018 (data sourced from USDA FSA, 2018)

Overuse and misuse of antibiotics in both humans and animals has dramatically increased the size and diversity of the resistome, underpinning the dire position we find ourselves in now (von Wintersdorff et al., 2016).

The emergence of horizontally transmissible colistin resistance in China in 2015 (Liu et al., 2016), and its rapid global spread, is one such example – and one that is particularly pertinent to the pig industry.

The tale of colistin

Colistin is an antibiotic in the family of polymyxins. It was not commonly prescribed in humans due to its potential for renal toxicity. However, with the increase in global AMR, colistin is now considered the last line of defence for several multi-drug resistant gram-negative infections in humans – its value in the treatment of life-threatening infections needs to be preserved for as long as possible (Rhouma et al., 2017).

FIGURE (2) EU producers of pork in 2016 (source: ec.europa.eu/eurostat)

Historically, colistin has also been a mainstay antibiotic used in pig production systems across the world – often in the prevention of post-weaning diarrhoea (PWD) (Kempf et al., 2013). This usage did not come under particular scrutiny in the early days of the AMR debate because any resistance to colistin, observed up to that point in time, was non-transferrable genome-mediated, meaning it was not considered likely to amplify and/or disseminate rapidly (Rhouma et al., 2017).

FIGURE (3) Changes in aggregated overall sales of fluoroquinolones, third and fourth generation cephalosporins and polymyxins for 25 EU/EAA countries, from 2011 to 2016 (note differences in the scales of the Y axes) (source: EMA, 2018)

However, with the discovery of the mcr-1 plasmid-mediated gene, in Escherichia coli isolated from people, pigs and retail meat in China in 2015 (Liu et al., 2016), this all changed. Suddenly, there were ARGs to colistin with the ability to transfer horizontally between different bacterial species, sounding warning bells in the scientific community across the globe (Hu et al., 2016; Tse and Yuen, 2016).

What was the global response?

WHO added colistin to their list of highest priority critically important antimicrobials, HP-CIAs, along with the now well-known list of fluoroquinolones, third and fourth generation cephalosporins, macrolides and glycopeptides (WHO, 2017).

The Chinese government banned the use of colistin in feed for livestock (Walsh and Wu, 2016). The European Medicines Agency (EMA) added colistin to their Category 2 class of antibiotics, which includes medicines reserved for treating infections in animals for which no effective alternative treatments exist (EMA, 2016).

FIGURE (4A) Total use of colistin in production animals, Denmark (source: Danmap, 2017)

The EMA also advised all Member States to reduce colistin use to a target of 5mg/PCU (population correction unit). The EMA cautioned that reductions in colistin use should be achieved through improved animal health, and not by the use of other antimicrobials to compensate.

How did the industry react?

The biggest global producers of pork are China, the EU and the United States (Figure 1). Within the EU, the biggest producers are Spain and Germany (Figure 2). China banned the use of colistin in animal feed. In the US, colistin is not marketed for livestock use, although the mcr-1 gene has been isolated from pigs in the US (Meinersmann et al., 2017).

In EU countries, colistin was still being widely used in pig production systems prior to its addition to the list of HP-CIAs in 2016, despite reductions in total antimicrobial usage (Figure 3).

Colistin reductions are, however, now being reported. For example, recent data from Denmark, Spain and the UK demonstrate encouraging trends (Figures 4A to 4C).

FIGURE (4B) Data from Spain shows reductions in colistin use in livestock (source: Sacristán Álvarez, 2018)
FIGURE (4C) HP-CIA usage recorded for active ingredient (mg/kg) of antibiotics in eMB Pigs: colistin (green), 3rd and 4th generation cephalosporins (purple) and fluoroquinolones (blue). Data from the UK shows reductions in colistin usage in pigs (source: UK-VARSS, 2018)

What does the future look like?

A word of caution here. Data from Denmark indicate that as the use of colistin has declined, so the use of other antibiotics (penicillins, macrolides and aminoglycosides) has increased, suggesting that this may be compensatory use, and that tackling PWD is proving challenging.

Tackling AMR is not about focusing on zero-usage. It is about focusing on improving and maximising animal health and welfare, to minimise the necessity for antimicrobial use. Routine preventive use is a particular issue that needs to be addressed, and success may require systematic change and human behavioural change.

Progress from the pig industry in many countries to date has been impressive, but the complex causality of PWD, together with problematic endemic pig diseases (such as PRRSV and Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae) and unpredictable future bacterial attempts to outwit us humans, will pose ongoing challenges for the industry.

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