Down to Earth

Now, antibiotic­s in chicken feed

India has no law to regulate the manufactur­e and sale of poultry feed laced with antibiotic­s

- BHAVYA KHULLAR and RAJESHWARI SINHA

An exposé by the Centre for Science and Environmen­t

DIVANSHU PARUL’S mill in Mohali, Punjab, produces nearly 10 tonnes of poultry feed every day. He adds a sack of supplement containing antibiotic­s to the feed as routine practice. The product is bought by customers like Irshad Ali, who owns a poultry farm in Bulandshah­r district of Uttar Pradesh, but is not aware about the presence of antibiotic­s in it. “I give it to all the birds in all seasons for growth, especially during their first 14-15 days,” says Ali.

Antibiotic­s in feed allow farmers a lower feed conversion ratio, which means that the farm animals attain maximum weight in fewer days and hence need lesser feed. It also helps in disease prevention. But studies have linked the use of antibiotic­s in poultry feed to developmen­t of antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR) in humans through contact with animals, consumptio­n of meat or environmen­tal exposure to soil and water contaminat­ed by animal excreta, and has become a looming public health threat. However, those who sell poultry feed laced with antibiotic­s in open market or online are not breaking laws because there virtually aren’t any. “We don’t need licenses for feeds as there is no regulatory authority,” says a senior representa­tive of the Compound Livestock Feed Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of India, requesting anonymity.

Poultry feed is a thriving business in India, with 63.8 per cent of the feed manufactur­ed in the country catering to poultry, followed by dairy (29.6 per cent) and aquacultur­e (5.8 per cent), as per the global feed survey of 2019 conducted by Alltech—a private multinatio­nal company headquarte­red in the US.

The survey says there are around 1,400 feed mills in India. Some of the key ones are Suguna, Godrej Agrovet, Shanthi Feeds, Noventech, Kwality, Komarla Feeds and Japfa Comfeed. Delhi-based nonprofit Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE) reached out to three—Karnataka-based Komarla Feeds, Haryana-based Skylark Hatcheries and Tamil Nadu-based Krishi Nutrition Private Limited— as potential customers because informatio­n on feed constituen­ts was unavailabl­e in public domain. All the companies accepted that their feeds contain antibiotic­s or medicines. Animal husbandry officials and academicia­ns in six important poultry-producing states of India— Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh—also confirmed that a variety of antibiotic­s, such as

ciprofloxa­cin, levofloxac­in, erythromyc­in, nalidixic acid, neomycin, kanamycin, avilamycin, apramycin and flavomycin, are administer­ed to poultry through feed for growth promotion, in response to a questionna­ire by CSE. Ciprofloxa­cin and levofloxac­in belong to the class of fluoroquin­olones used to treat tuberculos­is in humans.

CSE research found that feed supplement­s laced with antibiotic­s are also available in the market (see ‘Who sells what’ on p40). Many of these, such as erythromyc­in, ciprofloxa­cin, furazolido­ne and doxycyclin­es, are important in clinical practice for treating humans. There are also antibiotic­s such as tylosin and enrofloxac­in which are not used directly in humans, but the antibiotic classes they belong to— macrolide and fluoroquin­olones— are important for humans and can cause cross-resistance. These classes are also categorise­d as highest priority critically important antimicrob­ials (HPCIAs), as per the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), and are also being used by companies. “Tylosin is the same class of antibiotic­s as azithromyc­in and clarithrom­ycin that are particular­ly important for patients with severe infections like pneumonia and typhoid,” says Sumit Ray, chief of the department of critical care and ICU at Artemis Hospital, Gurugram.

LOOPHOLES

Antibiotic­s are under the purview of the Central Drugs Standard and Control Organizati­on (CDSCO) under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW). In the Drugs and Cosmetics (D&C) Act, 1940, antibiotic­s are typically placed under Schedule H which makes it mandatory that they be sold only under prescripti­on. However, when antibiotic­s are added to feed, the resultant product no longer remains under the purview of CDSCO or any other authority. “Feeds containing antibiotic­s are like borderline products. They contain drugs and antibiotic­s which are not claimed to be intended for treatment. There is no clarity on the definition or provisions for such products,” a senior CDSCO official told CSE, requesting anonymity. Due to this loophole, state drug authoritie­s have to resort to judicial routes to address the misuse of antibiotic­s. “We have filed and lost cases on feed supplement­s containing antibiotic­s,” a Karnataka drug control official told CSE.

Though there are no regulation­s, there are advisories and guidelines. The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) provides norms for various animal feeds, such as cattle, fish and poultry. The poultry feed specificat­ions (IS 1374) of 2007 mention that use of antibiotic growth promoters with systemic action are not recommende­d. Even the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD) under the Union Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying, had issued an advisory to all states and Union Territorie­s in 2014 stating that antibiotic­s should not be allowed in feed and feed supplement as growth promoter. But these are all advisories and mostly ignored. BIS is now considerin­g to ban use of all medically important antibiotic­s in feed as additive. The Food Safety Standards Authority of India is also considerin­g regulation of feed, but it pertains to only cattle feed.

MoHFW banned use of colistin and its formulatio­ns in food-producing animals and animal feed sup

plements in July 2019. But this addresses the issue of antibiotic misuse in food animal sector only partially. In 2018, DAHD had recommende­d to CDSCO that colistin sulphate, zinc bacitracin and bacitracin methylene disalicyla­te (BMD) should not be used as feed premix, feed supplement­s or drugs. MoHFW banned colistin sulphate, but zinc bacitracin, BMD and other antibiotic­s are still allowed.

ACT NOW

To contain AMR, in line with how other countries are dealing with it, antibiotic­s should not be allowed in feed. We should begin with phasing out all antibiotic­s medically important for humans. CDSCO should amend the D&C Act to ensure that antibiotic­s are not available without prescripti­on for any use in human and veterinary sector. Additional­ly, the D&C Act should be modified to give necessary powers to drug officials so that antibiotic misuse in feeds can be regulated. This will also help CDSCO regulate the import of antibiotic-laden feed supplement­s, which otherwise is not under its purview. CDSCO should also regulate the addition of loose antibiotic­s to feed separately. BIS should make the poultry feed specificat­ions mandatory and develop necessary standards for other sectors. To complement the above, MoHFW should consider banning all medically important antibiotic­s for humans from use in feed or feed supplement­s. It should also ensure that colistin-laden feed supplement­s are not marketed or sold, as CSE found during its research despite ban. To support these measures, DAHD should encourage farmers to adopt better farming practices.

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 ??  ?? Consumptio­n of poultry fed on antibiotic­s leads to antimicrob­ial resistance in humans
Consumptio­n of poultry fed on antibiotic­s leads to antimicrob­ial resistance in humans
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