Cajsa Isgren and colleagues at the University of Liverpool
examined antibiotic susceptibility test results from over 3000 bacterial
isolates cultured from swabs taken from equine clinical cases. The tests had
been performed at six large equine diagnostic laboratories.
Resistance to at least one class of antimicrobial was
present in 89.0% of Gram‐positive and
68.9% of Gram‐negative isolates.
MDR (resistance to three or more different classes of antimicrobial)
was present in 34.9% of isolates. MDR was more common in Gram positive than
Gram negative bacteria. The most common sources of multiple drug resistant bacteria
were catheter insertion sites and surgical site infections.
Newer antibacterials were not exempt from resistance. Resistance
to third/fourth generation cephalosporins was found in 28.1% of Gram‐negative
isolates. Fluoroquinolones resistance was present in 12.5% of relevant isolates.
The authors stress the importance of ongoing surveillance to
monitor changing patterns of resistance and promote antimicrobial stewardship
in equine practice.
For more details, see:
Antimicrobial
resistance surveillance from clinical submissions in UK horses
C. M.
Isgren, N. J. Williams, O. D. Fletcher, D. Timofte, T. W. Maddox, P. D. Clegg
and G. L. Pinchbeck
Equine
Vet J (2019) 51, p26
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