FAO and ICAR published the surveillance data of the Indian Network for Fishery and Animal Antimicrobial Resistance (INFAAR) for 2019-22.
This is the first report on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance trends in fisheries and livestock sector from India.
Antibiotic use in food animal production is known to be a driver for AMR.
In E coli isolates, the notable resistance was against cefotaxime (46 per cent) and ampicillin (41 per cent).
Both S aureus and CONS isolates showed around 75 percent resistance to the penicillin.
In addition, 41 of the total S aureus isolates (452) were found to be methicillin-resistant S aureus (MRSA), a drug-resistant variant of Staphylococcus.
For both E coli and Staphylococci, isolates from poultry origin exhibited higher resistance rates for all the tested antibiotics as compared to all the other food animals.