Abstract
Antibiotic dry cow therapy (aDCT) at the end of lactation is an effective mastitis control measure. Selective dry cow therapy means that only infected or presumed-infected cows are treated, instead of aDCT being used as a treatment for all cows. Because antibiotic resistance poses a global threat, livestock production is under increasing pressure to reduce antibiotic use. Changes in management should not, however, impair animal welfare or cause significant economic losses. Our objective was to compare milk yield and somatic cell count (SCC) between aDCT-treated and untreated cows in herds that used selective aDCT, taking into account risk factors for reduced yield and high SCC. The information source was 2015 to 2017 Dairy Herd Improvement data, with 4,720 multiparous cows from 172 Finnish dairy farms. The response variables were test-day milk yield (kg/d) and naturally log-transformed composite SCC (×1,000 cells/mL) during the first 154 d in milk (DIM). The statistical tool was a linear mixed-effects model with 2-level random intercepts, cows nested within herds, and a first-order autoregressive [AR(1)] correlation structure. The overall proportion of aDCT-treated cows was 25% (1,176/4,720). Due to the interaction effect, SCC on the last test day prior to dry-off affected postcalving milk yield differently in aDCT-treated cows than in untreated cows. A higher SCC prior to dry-off correlated with a greater daily yield difference after calving between cows treated and untreated. The majority of cows had SCC < 200,000 cells/mL before dry-off, and as SCC before dry-off decreased, difference in yield between aDCT-treated and untreated cows decreased. Postcalving SCC was lower for aDCT-treated cows compared with untreated cows. To illustrate, for cows with an SCC of 200,000 cells/mL before dry-off, compared with untreated cows, aDCT-treated cows produced 0.97 kg/d more milk and, at 45 DIM, had an SCC that was 20,000 cells/mL lower. Higher late-lactation SCC and lactational mastitis treatments were associated with higher postcalving SCC. A dry period lasting more than 30 d was associated with higher yields but not with SCC. Our findings indicate that a missed aDCT treatment for a high-SCC cow has a negative effect on subsequent lactation milk yield and SCC, which emphasizes the importance of accurate selection of cows to be treated.
Highlights
Mastitis is the most common disease in dairy cows, causing significant economic effects on milk production and compromising animal welfare (Rajala-Schultz et al, 1999; Halasa et al, 2007)
A higher somatic cell count (SCC) prior to dry-off correlated with a greater daily yield difference after calving between cows treated and untreated
Postcalving SCC was lower for Antibiotic dry cow therapy (aDCT)-treated cows compared with untreated cows
Summary
Mastitis is the most common disease in dairy cows, causing significant economic effects on milk production and compromising animal welfare (Rajala-Schultz et al, 1999; Halasa et al, 2007). Antibiotic dry cow therapy (aDCT) is an effective way to control mastitis, as cows are susceptible to new IMI at the time of drying-off and again during the periparturient period (Dingwell et al, 2003; Bradley and Green, 2004). Several countries use a blanket DCT approach, in which intramammary antibiotics are infused at dry-off into all quarters of all cows (Bertulat et al, 2015; USDA, 2016; Fujiwara et al, 2018). This treatment recommendation is based on the 5-point plan created in the 1960s and has since been a tool to reduce mastitis (Neave et al, 1969). Because the most essential methods for controlling antibiotic resistance are by restricting the use of antibiotics and improving hygiene, optimizing all antibiotic therapy use is crucial (McEwen and Collignon, 2018)
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