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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 1998, p. 3333-3333, Vol. 42, No. 12
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Isolation of Glycopeptide-Resistant Enterococci from Chickens in
Japan
 |
LETTER |
Avoparcin is a glycopeptide antibiotic that has been used as a
growth-promoting agent for food animals in many countries, except
the United States and Canada. In human medicine,
glycopeptide-resistant enterococci (GRE) have become an
increasingly serious problem in the treatment of nosocomial
infections (6, 8, 10). In Europe, GRE have been isolated
from animals, meat, the environment, and healthy humans outside
hospitals (1, 2, 4, 7, 9), suggesting the possibility of
transmission of GRE from food animals to humans via the food
chain (2-4). In Japan, two glycopeptides have been
approved as feed additives for chickens
avoparcin in 1985 and
orienticin in 1994
but no papers have been published on the isolation
of GRE from chickens in Japan. Then, a nationwide survey was conducted
to isolate GRE from the fecal droppings of chickens on farms in
Japan.
View this table:
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TABLE 1.
In vitro susceptibilities to avoparcin, orienticin, and
vancomycin of enterococci isolated from fecal droppings of chickens
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Prior to isolation of enterococci from fecal droppings, the
distribution of avoparcin from the manufacturers to chicken farms was
traced for 1 year across the country. Avoparcin was confirmed to have
been brought into 24 prefectures in the period from December 1995 to November 1996. Fecal droppings were sampled from 39 broiler farms in
these 24 prefectures. Fecal droppings of chickens not exposed to
avoparcin were sampled from 11 broiler farms and 35 layer farms in 23 prefectures where no avoparcin had been distributed in the same period.
Fecal samples were taken during a 1-week period from 11 December to 18 December 1996. Enterococci were isolated on bile esculin azide agar
plates. MICs were determined for avoparcin, orienticin, and
vancomycin by the agar dilution method with Mueller-Hinton agar.
Two hundred and sixty-three enterococci were isolated from the 35 broiler farms confirmed to have used avoparcin. Eight (3.0%) of
them were GRE, originating from three (8.6%) farms. Of these eight strains, seven were identified as Enterococcus
faecalis and the remaining one was identified as E. faecium. Five of the seven E. faecalis strains
originated from the same farm, and the remaining two strains originated
from another farm. All of the GRE were proved by PCR to
harbor the vanA gene. No GRE were found among 295 enterococci isolated from broiler and layer farms not exposed to
avoparcin (Table 1).
In Japan, the amounts of avoparcin recently marketed were 8,902 kg in
1993, 5,214 kg in 1994, 1,840 kg in 1995, and 986 kg in 1996, accounting for 2.78, 1.87, 0.68, and 0.40% of all
growth-promoting antibiotics, respectively (5).
Even though the consumption of avoparcin was smaller than that in
Denmark (1) and has decreased each year, avoparcin use was
associated with the presence of GRE in the feces of chickens after only
a decade of use. The presence of GRE in the fecal droppings of
chickens in this survey led to the ban of avoparcin and orienticin in
food animals on 18 March 1997 in Japan.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Y. Ike, Gunma University School of Medicine, for
helpful advice. We are also grateful to colleagues at Livestock Health
Service Centers across the country for fecal sampling and for providing
us with the enterococcal isolates.
 |
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| | | | |
H. Yoshimura
M. Ishimaru
Y. S. Endoh
National Veterinary Assay Laboratory Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 1-15-1 Tokura, Kokubunji, Tokyo 185-8511 Japan
|
| | | | |
M. Suginaka
S. Yamatani
Tokyo Fertilizer and Feed Inspection Station Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 1-3-3 Ohtemachi, Chiyodaku, Tokyo 100-0004 Japan
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 1998, p. 3333-3333, Vol. 42, No. 12
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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