Abstract

Flavobacterium psychrophilum is the most important bacterial pathogen for freshwater farmed salmonids in Chile. The aims of this study were to determine the susceptibility to antimicrobials used in fish farming of Chilean isolates and to calculate their epidemiological cut-off (COWT) values. A number of 125 Chilean isolates of F. psychrophilum were isolated from reared salmonids presenting clinical symptoms indicative of flavobacteriosis and their identities were confirmed by 16S rRNA polymerase chain reaction. Susceptibility to antibacterials was tested on diluted Mueller-Hinton by using an agar dilution MIC method and a disk diffusion method. The COWT values calculated by Normalized Resistance Interpretation (NRI) analysis allow isolates to be categorized either as wild-type fully susceptible (WT) or as manifesting reduced susceptibility (NWT). When MIC data was used, NRI analysis calculated a COWT of ≤0.125, ≤2, and ≤0.5 μg mL-1 for amoxicillin, florfenicol, and oxytetracycline, respectively. For the quinolones, the COWT were ≤1, ≤0.5, and ≤0.125 μg mL-1 for oxolinic acid, flumequine, and enrofloxacin, respectively. The disk diffusion data sets obtained in this work were extremely diverse and were spread over a wide range. For the quinolones there was a close agreement between the frequencies of NWT isolates calculated using MIC and disk data. For oxolinic acid, flumequine, and enrofloxacin the frequencies were 45, 39, and 38% using MIC data, and 42, 41, and 44%, when disk data were used. There was less agreement with the other antimicrobials, because NWT frequencies obtained using MIC and disk data, respectively, were 24 and 10% for amoxicillin, 8 and 2% for florfenicol, and 70 and 64% for oxytetracycline. Considering that the MIC data was more precise than the disk diffusion data, MIC determination would be the preferred method for susceptibility testing for this species and the NWT frequencies derived from the MIC data sets should be considered as the more authoritative. Despite the high frequency of isolates showing full susceptibility to florfenicol, the significant frequencies of isolates exhibiting reduced susceptibility to oxytetracycline and quinolones may result in treatment failures when these agents are used.

Highlights

  • Flavobacterium psychrophilum, the causative agent of bacterial cold-water disease (CWD) and rainbow trout fry syndrome (RTFS), is a gram-negative bacterium that produces an acute septicaemic infection in salmonids (Barnes and Brown, 2011) causing significant losses to trout and salmon farming worldwide (Nematollahi et al, 2003).The lack of an effective commercial vaccine results in antibiotic treatment being currently the treatment of choice for controlling losses resulting from F. psychrophilum infections (Barnes and Brown, 2011)

  • The value of these observations as quality control measures must not, be exaggerated. These acceptable ranges were developed and validated for data produced by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) broth micro-dilution protocol for testing F. psychrophilum (CLSI, 2014a)

  • In attempting to compare the COWT values for Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MIC) data calculated in this work with those that have been suggested by other workers it must be remembered that cut-off values are test-protocol specific

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Summary

Introduction

The lack of an effective commercial vaccine results in antibiotic treatment being currently the treatment of choice for controlling losses resulting from F. psychrophilum infections (Barnes and Brown, 2011). According to these authors amoxicillin, oxytetracycline, florfenicol, oxolinic acid and various sulphonamides or potentiated sulphonamides all have been reported as being used for this purpose. The World Animal Health Organisation has recommended that epidemiological cut-off values calculated by standardized and statistically based analytical methods should be used as interpretive criteria These species-specific cut-off values allow the categorisation of isolates either as wild-type (WT) fully susceptible members of their species or as manifesting reduced susceptibility (NWT; Silley, 2012).

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