4.7 Article

Prospective study on quantitative and qualitative antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory drug use in white veal calves

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 1027-1038

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkr570

Keywords

defined daily doses; group treatment; antimicrobials; anti-inflammatory drugs; dosing

Funding

  1. Department of Large Animal Internal Medicine (Ghent University)
  2. Flemish cattle monitoring project ('Veepeiler Rund')

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To document and quantify drug use in white veal calves, an intensive livestock production system where multidrug resistance is abundantly present. Drug consumption data were prospectively collected on 15 white veal production cohorts (n5853 calves) in Belgium (200709). Treatment incidences (TIs) based on animal defined daily dose (ADD), prescribed daily dose (PDD) and used daily dose (UDD) were calculated. Risk factors were identified by linear regression. The average TIADD of antimicrobial treatments was 416.8 ADD per 1000 animals at risk. Predominantly, oral group antimicrobial treatments were used (95.8). Of the oral group antimicrobial treatments, 12 and 88 were used for prophylactic or metaphylactic indications, respectively. The main indication for group and individual drug use was respiratory disease. The most frequently used antimicrobials (group treatments) were oxytetracycline (23.7), amoxicillin (18.5), tylosin (17.2) and colistin (15.2). Deviations from the leaflet dosage recommendations were frequently encountered, with 43.7 of the group treatments underdosed (often oxytetracycline and tylosin to treat dysbacteriosis). In 33.3 of the oral antimicrobial group treatments a combination of two antimicrobial preparations was used. Smaller integrations used more antimicrobials in group treatments than larger ones (P0.05); an integration is defined as a company that combines all steps of the production chain by having its own feed plant and slaughterhouse and by placing its calves in veal herds owned by producers that fatten these calves for this integration on contract. Producers used higher dosages than prescribed by the veterinarian in cohorts with a single caretaker (P0.01). The present study provided detailed information on the intensive antimicrobial use in the white veal industry. Reduction can only be achieved by reducing the number of oral group treatments.

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