Abstract

The use of veterinary antibiotics is largely unregulated in low-income countries. Consequently, food producers rarely observe drug withdrawal periods, contributing to drug residues in food products. Drug residues in milk can cause immunogenic reactions in people, and selectively favor antibiotic-resistant bacteria in unpasteurized products. We quantified the prevalence of antibiotic residues in pasteurized and unpasteurized milk, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria from unpasteurized milk sold within Kibera, an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. Ninety-five milk samples (74 pasteurized and 21 unpasteurized) were collected from shops, street vendors or vending machines, and tested for the presence of β-lactam and tetracycline residues using IDEXX SNAP kits. MacConkey agar without- and with antibiotics (ampicillin, 32 μg/ml; tetracycline, 16 μg/ml) was used to enumerate presumptive E. coli based on colony morphology (colony forming units per ml, CFU/ml). β-lactam and tetracycline residues were found in 7.4% and 3.2% of all milk samples, respectively. Residues were more likely to be present in unpasteurized milk samples (5/21, 23.8%) compared to pasteurized samples (5/75, 6.8%); P = 0.039. Two thirds of unpasteurized samples (14/21, 66.7%) contained detectable numbers of presumptive E. coli (mean 3.5 Log10 CFU/ml) and of these, 92.8% (13/14) were positive for ampicillin- (mean 3.2 Log10 CFU/ml) and 50% (7/14) for tetracycline-resistant E. coli (mean 3.1 Log10 CFU/ml). We found no relationship between the presence of antibiotic residues and the presence of antibiotic-resistant E. coli in unpasteurized milk sold within Kibera (P > 0.2).

Highlights

  • Antibiotics can be used as “insurance” against livestock losses to disease, challenging the control of antibiotic use and antibiotic residues in food products

  • Ten of the total 95 milk samples (10.5%) tested positive for antibiotic residues, including seven (7.4%) which were positive for β-lactam residues and three (3.2%) for tetracycline residues; none were positive for both

  • Unpasteurized milk has a potential role in disseminating both pathogens and antibiotic-resistant bacteria to people through several mechanisms

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Summary

Introduction

Antibiotics can be used as “insurance” against livestock losses to disease, challenging the control of antibiotic use and antibiotic residues in food products. This situation is common in many low-income countries where the burden of infectious diseases drives the demand for antibiotics. In these settings, informal food markets are supplied with animals or animal products produced under limited antibiotic regulations, lack of enforcement of drug withdrawal periods, and absence of residue testing programs.

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