4.6 Article

Pilot Study on Alteration of LA-MRSA Status of Pigs during Fattening Period on Straw Bedding by Two Types of Cleaning

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10050521

Keywords

MRSA; MRSA-status alteration; decolonization

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), Research Network on Zoonotic Infectious Diseases [1Health-PREVENT, 01KI1727B, 01KI1727A]
  2. Ministry for Environment, Agriculture, Conservation and Consumer Protection of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
  3. South Westphalia University of Applied Sciences

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This study aims to examine the impact of LA-MRSA on farm pigs and the role of cleaning and disinfection measures in controlling LA-MRSA. The results indicate that using straw bedding and simple cleaning may help reduce the prevalence of LA-MRSA.
In countries with professional pig husbandry in stables, the prevalence of livestock-associated (LA) methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) on farms has remained high or has further increased in recent years. Simple measures to reduce LA-MRSA among pigs have not yet been successfully implemented. The aim of this pilot study is twofold: first, to examine how the LA-MRSA status of LA-MRSA positive fattening pigs at the date of housing changes over the fatting period on straw bedding and, second, whether this change could be influenced by the quality of cleaning and disinfection (C&D). For this purpose, 122 animals are individually tested for LA-MRSA carriage at five sequential time points comparing pigs housed on a farm using straw bedding plus C&D (n = 59) vs. straw bedding plus simple cleaning (n = 63). At the time of housing, all animals in both groups are LA-MRSA positive. This status changes to 0% in the group with simple cleaning until the end of fattening and 28% in the C&D group. LA-MRSA in environmental and air samples is also reduced over the fattening period. The results indicate that keeping pigs on straw might be one way to reduce LA-MRSA during the fattening period with simple cleaning appearing to be more beneficial than C&D. Further investigations are necessary to determine the influencing factors more precisely.

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