There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Demand for animal protein for human consumption is rising globally at an unprecedented
rate. Modern animal production practices are associated with regular use of antimicrobials,
potentially increasing selection pressure on bacteria to become resistant. Despite
the significant potential consequences for antimicrobial resistance, there has been
no quantitative measurement of global antimicrobial consumption by livestock. We address
this gap by using Bayesian statistical models combining maps of livestock densities,
economic projections of demand for meat products, and current estimates of antimicrobial
consumption in high-income countries to map antimicrobial use in food animals for
2010 and 2030. We estimate that the global average annual consumption of antimicrobials
per kilogram of animal produced was 45 mg⋅kg(-1), 148 mg⋅kg(-1), and 172 mg⋅kg(-1)
for cattle, chicken, and pigs, respectively. Starting from this baseline, we estimate
that between 2010 and 2030, the global consumption of antimicrobials will increase
by 67%, from 63,151 ± 1,560 tons to 105,596 ± 3,605 tons. Up to a third of the increase
in consumption in livestock between 2010 and 2030 is imputable to shifting production
practices in middle-income countries where extensive farming systems will be replaced
by large-scale intensive farming operations that routinely use antimicrobials in subtherapeutic
doses. For Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, the increase in antimicrobial
consumption will be 99%, up to seven times the projected population growth in this
group of countries. Better understanding of the consequences of the uninhibited growth
in veterinary antimicrobial consumption is needed to assess its potential effects
on animal and human health.
Antimicrobial resistance is a major public health crisis, eroding the discovery of antimicrobials and their application to clinical medicine. There is a general lack of knowledge of the importance of agricultural antimicrobial use as a factor in antimicrobial resistance even among experts in medicine and public health. This review focuses on agricultural antimicrobial drug use as a major driver of antimicrobial resistance worldwide for four reasons: It is the largest use of antimicrobials worldwide; much of the use of antimicrobials in agriculture results in subtherapeutic exposures of bacteria; drugs of every important clinical class are utilized in agriculture; and human populations are exposed to antimicrobial-resistant pathogens via consumption of animal products as well as through widespread release into the environment.
scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.