4.5 Article

Evaluation of the in vitro susceptibility of Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi to tiamulin using minimum inhibitory concentration tests

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH DISEASES
Volume 45, Issue 6, Pages 795-799

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfd.13604

Keywords

antimicrobial treatment; Chile; fish pathogen; MIC; tenacibaculosis

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarollo (ANID) from the Chilean Government [FONDECYT 1190283, FONDAP 15110027]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study analyzes the susceptibility patterns of Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi to tiamulin and suggests that tiamulin is a viable alternative to florfenicol for the treatment of tenacibaculosis in the Chilean salmon industry.
Tenacibaculosis caused by Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi is the third most important bacterial fish infection affecting the Chilean salmon industry. Losses to this disease are most frequently controlled by treatments with florfenicol and oxytetracycline. However, recent tenacibaculosis outbreaks were controlled through the extra-label, oral administration of tiamulin, resulting in high treatment efficiency. In this study, we present an analysis of susceptibility patterns of 32 T. dicentrarchi isolates and the type strain CECT 7612(T) to tiamulin by determining the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) according to the procedures recommended by the Clinical and Laboratory Standard Institute, but fixing incubation temperature to the more appropriate for the growth of T. dicentrarchi (18 oC). The MICs of the T. dicentrarchi isolates were unimodally distributed (0.06-1.0 mu g/ml range), while the CECT 7612(T) strain presented an MIC of 0.5 mu g/ml. Calculations using Normalized Resistance Interpretation provided epidemiological cut-off values of <= 1.0 mu g/ml, with the 33 T. dicentrarchi classified as wild type. In Chile, tiamulin is authorized for use in other livestock species, but application in salmonids is extra-label. Our presented in vitro results suggest that tiamulin is a viable alternative to florfenicol, specifically as tiamulin requires comparatively lower concentrations to inhibit T. dicentrarchi. Considering that tiamulin is also exclusively for veterinary use, is classified as least important by the World Health Organization and has not resulted in the development of bacterial resistance, pharmaceutical companies should be requested to register tiamulin and provide alternative antimicrobial treatments for the salmonid industry.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available