4.7 Review

Prevalence and distribution of antimicrobial resistance in effluent wastewater from animal slaughter facilities: A systematic review

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 318, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120848

Keywords

Abattoir; Slaughterhouse; Antibiotic resistance genes; Microbiome; One health; Livestock

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The extensive use of antibiotics in food animal production and disposal of untreated wastewater from food animal slaughter facilities may cause a change in microbiomes of different ecosystems, leading to the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. This global epidemiological problem has been poorly characterized and needs further study. A systematic review was conducted to determine the prevalence and distribution patterns of antimicrobial resistance in effluent wastewater from animal slaughter facilities worldwide. The results showed variable incidences of resistance against all major antimicrobial classes, indicating a significant contribution of anthropogenic activities in farming systems to the spread of antimicrobial resistance into the environment.
The extensive use of antibiotics in food animal production and disposal of untreated wastewater from food animal slaughter facilities may create a shift in microbiomes of different ecosystems by generating reservoirs of antimicrobial resistance along the human-animal-environmental interface. This epidemiological problem has been studied, but its magnitude and impact on a global scale is poorly characterised. A systematic review was done to determine global prevalence and distribution patterns of antimicrobial resistance in effluent wastewater from animal slaughter facilities. Extracted data were stratified into rational groups for secondary analyses and presented as percentages. Culture and sensitivity testing was the predominant method; Escherichia spp., Enterococcus spp., and Staphylococcus aureus were the most targeted isolates. Variable incidences of resistance were detected against all major antimicrobial classes including reserved drugs such as ceftazidime, piperacillin, gentamicin, ciprofloxacin, and chloramphenicol; the median frequency and range in resistant Gram-negative isolates were: 11 (0-100), 62 (0-100), 8 (0-100), 14 (0-93) and 12 (0-62) respectively. Ciprofloxacin was the most tested drug with the highest incidences of resistance in livestock slaughterhouses in Iran (93%), Nigeria (50%) and China (20%), and poultry slaughterhouses in Germany (21-81%) and Spain (56%). Spatial global distribution patterns for antimicrobial resistance were associated with previously reported magnitude of antibiotic use in livestock or poultry farming and, the implicit existence of jurisdictional policies to regulate antibiotic use. These data indicate that anthropogenic activities in farming systems are a major contributor to the cause and dissemination of antimicrobial resistance into the environment via slaughterhouse effluents.

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