4.6 Article

Antibacterial Residue Excretion via Urine as an Indicator for Therapeutical Treatment Choice and Farm Waste Treatment

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10070762

Keywords

antibiotic; sulfonamide; quinolone; excretion; LC-MS; MS; urine

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the Interreg V-A Spain-France-Andorra programme (POCTEFA (Programa INTERREG V-A Espana-Francia-Andorra) 2014-2020) (EFA (Espana-Francia-Andorra)) [152/16]

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This study described the excretion rate and duration of antimicrobials in pig urine during treatment, finding variations in degradation rate and total excretion time among different drugs. Despite similar effectiveness, sulfamethoxypyridazine would be the preferable choice due to only requiring waste treatment for 1 week post-treatment.
Many of the infectious diseases that affect livestock have bacteria as etiological agents. Thus, therapy is based on antimicrobials that leave the animal's tissues mainly via urine, reaching the environment through slurry and waste water. Once there, antimicrobial residues may lead to antibacterial resistance as well as toxicity for plants, animals, or humans. Hence, the objective was to describe the rate of antimicrobial excretion in urine in order to select the most appropriate molecule while reducing harmful effects. Thus, 62 pigs were treated with sulfamethoxypyridazine, oxytetracycline, and enrofloxacin. Urine was collected through the withdrawal period and analysed via LC-MS/MS. Oxytetracycline had the slowest rate of degradation (a half-life time of 4.18 days) and the most extended elimination period in urine (over 2 months), followed by enrofloxacin (a half-life time of 1.48 days, total urine elimination in ca. 3 weeks) and sulfamethoxypyridazine (a half-life time of 0.49 days, total urine elimination in ca. 1 week). Bacterial sensitivity and recommendations for responsible use are limiting when selecting the treatment. Nevertheless, with similar effectiveness, sulfamethoxypyridazine would be the choice, as waste treatment would only need to be implemented for 1 week after treatment. Thus, more in-depth knowledge regarding antibacterial elimination would improve resource management, while protecting animals and consumers' health.

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