Maryn McKenna

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Does ethanol production produce resistant bacteria too?

April 22, 2009 By Maryn Leave a Comment

One of the challenges of disappearing down the rabbit hole of a gnarly chapter — gee, it’s dark down here — is that I get behind on my RSS feeds, and suddenly every entry in my Google Reader is at 1000+ and it’s all just too daunting.

So, trying to catch up a bit, I found two related, interesting and troubling stories from the Associated Press (4 April) and the online magazine Grist (7 April — yes, I said I was behind…).

Synopsis/synthesis: Corn-based ethanol, former darling of the energy and large-scale agriculture industries, suddenly doesn’t look like such a good idea – and not just because the market for it is crashing. Turns out that ethanol is made by adding yeast and sugar to corn mash; the yeast convert the carbohydrates to the alcohol that is the basis of the fuel. (Yes, just like making beer.) However, the mash is particularly attractive to Lactobacillus and other bacteria that produce lactic acid as a waste product rather than alcohol, and a tank full of lactic acid doesn’t make very good fuel. So, to keep the bacteria under control, ethanol producers add antibiotics. Specifically, penicillin and erythromycin — you’ll recognize those — and tylosin and virginiamycin, two macrolides, related to erythromycin, that are approved in the US for veterinary use.

Now, the problem with this practice, as you might predict, is that if the mash is not appropriately dosed, the presence of antibiotics within it can prompt some of the bacteria to develop resistance. (Here’s an article from the trade magazine Ethanol Producer discussing just that possibility.)

And the further complication of this is that the leftover mash, now called “distillers’ grains,” is sold as animal feed. Ask yourself: Where in animal production are animals most likely to eat grains? Answer: At finishing, in feedlots. In other words, fermented grains that may contain antibiotic residue, and may contain resistant bacteria, are being sold as feed to animals that are already being raised in conditions that have been shown to foster the development of resistant bacteria through subtherapeutic and prophylactic antibiotic use. In fact, some research has drawn an explicit link: Kansas State University scientists have found higher levels of E. coli O157 in the guts of cattle that were fed distillers’ grains.

All of this was new to me, but there’s an additional facet to the story that the AP and Grist pieces don’t highlight, and that just makes my head hurt: the use of virginiamycin. For those new to the story, virginiamycin is an allowed, widely used veterinary antibiotic in the US. However, it is not used in the European Union: It was banned there in 1998 because the EU’s ag authorities believed that it promoted resistance to the drug Synercid (quinupristin+dalfopristin), which is a drug of last resort against vancomycin-resistant bacteria such as VRE. (Here’s a Lancet paper that talks about that resistance mechanism.) Synercid was approved by the FDA in 1999 — two years after Synercid resistance had already been found in the US. (For a long but cogent explanation of the complex story of virginiamycin, see the book The Killers Within.)

So, just to recap: We have an industry whose long-term earnings are shaky, whose economic survival is partially secured by the sale of its waste product, and which via that waste product is putting antibiotic residues and antibiotic-resistant bacteria into the environment, and is conveying them into food animals, and is making particular use of an antibiotic that other countries have banned because they believe that, via its use in animals, it exerts an adverse impact on human health.

Something to remember the next time ethanol subsidies come up.

Filed Under: Science, Science Blogs, Superbug Tagged With: animals, antibiotics, E. coli, Europe, food, food policy, Science Blogs

Reducing antibiotic use in ag — by legislation

April 21, 2009 By Maryn Leave a Comment

A quick referral from the depths of the deadline murk: KCRA-3 TV in Sacramento covers legislation under consideration in California that would regulate antibiotic use on farms in the state.

(Hat-tip to Ethicurean)

Filed Under: Science, Science Blogs, Superbug Tagged With: animals, antibiotics, food, food policy, Science Blogs

More MRSA in pigs, in Portugal

April 14, 2009 By Maryn Leave a Comment

A brand-new report, in a letter to the International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, indicates that ST398 “pig MRSA” has been found in Portugal for the first time.

Constanca Pomba and colleagues from the Technical University of Lisbon swabbed and cultured the noses of pigs and veterinarians on two pig farms in different regions of Portugal, and also checked the air at both farms.

What they found:

  • On Farm A: All pigs and the veterinarian positive for ST398, the pig-origin strain that has been found so far in Iowa, Ontario, the Netherlands, France, Denmark, Germany and Austria and has, depending on the country, caused human disease and/been found on retail meat. The veterinarian was transiently colonized, which is to say that he was not carrying the bug long-term.
  • On Farm B: All pigs — but neither of two veterinarians — positive for a different MRSA strain, CC (or ST) 30. This is very interesting, because CC30 is usually a drug-sensitive strain (MSSA, methicillin-sensitive S. aureus), and has been found in pigs primarily in Denmark and France. In Portugal, it is a human MSSA hospital-infection strain.

Strains from both farms were resistant to tetracycline; this is turning out to be a great marker for these strains having emerged due to antibiotic pressure in animals, because tetracycline is very commonly used in pigs. but not much used for MRSA in humans. The strains have the genes tetK and tetM, so they are resistant not just to tetracycline itself, but to the whole class of tetracyclines including doxycycline and minocycline. The Farm B strains also carried the gene ermC, which encodes resistance to erythromycin.

So what does this tell us?

  • First, that (once again), every time people look for ST398, they find it; it is now a very widely distributed colonizing bug in pigs, and is repeatedly spreading to humans. What we don’t know, because all these studies are so new, is whether ST398 is actively expanding its range, or has been present in all these countries for a while. We have been anticipating its presence or spread (take your pick at this point) through the European Union because of open cross-border movement of food animals, meat, and agriculture and health care workers.
  • And second, it should tell us that it is really past time to start looking for this more systematically. Every finding of ST398 that we have (long archive of posts here) is due to an academic research team who decided to look for the bug. None of the findings, to date, have come from any national surveillance system. (NB: Except for the first human colonizations in the Netherlands, which were found as a result of the national “search and destroy” rules in hospitals.)

Of note, the European Union is running a study now that is supposed to report ST398 prevalence at any moment (as they have been saying since 2007). It is not expected to be comprehensive, since it was piggy-backed onto another study, but it is something. The US government has not been so enterprising.

The cite is: Pomba, C. et al. First description of meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) CC30 and CC398 from swine in Portugal. Intl J Antimicrob Agents (2009), doi: 10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2009.02.019

Filed Under: Science, Science Blogs, Superbug Tagged With: animals, antibiotics, colonization, Europe, food, MRSA, pigs, Science Blogs, ST398

Appearing today on The Ethicurean

April 14, 2009 By Maryn Leave a Comment

Constant readers, I want to let you know that the terrific food policy blog The Ethicurean (motto: “Chew the right thing“) very kindly had me over to do a Q&A on MRSA in meat. Please take a look and let them have some clicks: They are smart people thoughtfully elucidating a difficult subject, and worth following.

(And I would say that even if they hadn’t called me the “Superbug supersource,” honest.)

Filed Under: Science, Science Blogs, Superbug Tagged With: animals, food, MRSA, pigs, Science Blogs, ST398

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