There’s some new news out — along with a fair amount of public reaction — regarding “pig MRSA” or, to use the technical term, MRSA ST398, the “third epidemic” strain that emerged in pigs in the Netherlands in 2004 and has since appeared, in animals, retail meat, and humans, across the European Union, in Canada, and in the United States. (My last post on it is here, and a long archive of my posts on it starts here.)
I wish I could say the attention to ST398 was being paid in the United States, where there is almost certainly more MRSA in livestock than has been recorded, given that the only published surveillance, from 2009, covered only Iowa and Illinois. Unfortunately, there is still no indication that federal agencies have any intention to test for the presence of the organism in animals or in meat. In fact, the major surveillance mechanism for drug-resistant organisms in meat animals, retail meat and meat-eaters in the US, the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System or NARMS, doesn’t test for MRSA at all; it handles only enteric or gut-borne bacteria such as Salmonella and Campylobacter. (NARMS IS shared among three agencies: the CDC handles drug-resistant foodborne bacteria in humans, the FDA looks for the same bacteria in food, and the USDA looks for those bacteria being carried by livestock.)
Instead, as so often seems to happen with antibiotic resistance, the country paying attention is in Scandinavia — in this case, Denmark. The annual report from Denmark’s surveillance scheme, DANMAP (Danish Integrated Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring and Research Programme) is out. Denmark does surveil for MRSA, and here’s what they found: 13% of pigs, at slaughter, were positive for MRSA ST398.
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