Promoting Resistance by the Emission of Antibiotics from Hospitals and Households into Effluent

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

Objective
There is growing concern about bacterial resistance to antimicrobials. The majority of antibiotics used are only partially metabolized after administration, and are released via patient excreta into the municipal sewage system. Data on the use of antibiotics and their emission into hospital effluent are not available.

Methods
Antibiotic consumption in Germany was calculated on the basis of five hospitals of varying size and medical service spectrum and on prescriptions issued by medical practitioners. The predicted environmental concentration (PEC) was calculated for hospital effluent and for municipal sewage. The PECs were compared both with published minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC50) for sensitive pathogenic bacteria and with the predicted no-effect concentrations (PNECs).

Results
The amount of antibiotics emitted into hospital effluent may reach and exceed the MIC50 of susceptible pathogenic bacteria. The PEC/PNEC ratio is highest for hospital effluent (in some cases 10-20 times the MIC50) and frequently > 1 for municipal sewage. PECs are high enough for some compounds to have a PEC/PNEC ratio > 1 even in surface water.

Conclusion
The volume of antibiotics used in hospitals and private households and released into effluent and municipal sewage indicates a selection pressure on bacteria. Steps should be taken to reduce the risk by proper handling of antibiotics and their residues both in hospitals and by private users.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftClinical Microbiology and Infection
Jahrgang9
Ausgabenummer12
Seiten (von - bis)1203-1214
Anzahl der Seiten12
ISSN1198-743X
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 01.12.2003
Extern publiziertJa

Bibliographische Notiz

Funding Information:
We wish to thank E. Strehl, M. Herrel and W. Kohnen for their help in providing data on antibiotic use in the investigated hospitals. Our thanks also go to T. Erbe for providing some of the calculations. Takeda Pharma kindly supplied the figures on patented substance production. The work presented was supported by the Forschungs-kommission des Universitätsklinikums Freiburg (Research Commission of the University Hospital of Freiburg) and by the Ministerium für Forschung und Bildung (Ministry of Research and Education, Grant 02WU987/12) as well as by the Umweltbundesamt (Federal Environmental Protection Agency, Grants F and E 298 63722). Some of the work was supported by the European Community (LIFE 99 ENV/D/000455).

    Fachgebiete

  • ANTIBIOTIC, Antibiotics, antimicrobial, antimicrobials, bacteria, BACTERIAL, BACTERIAL-RESISTANCE, BACTERIUM, COMPOUND, concentration, CONSUMPTION, effluent, Emission, environmental, GERMANY, hospital, hospital effluent, HOSPITALS, Method, Methods, MUNICIPAL SEWAGE, PATIENT, PEC, PNEC, predicted environmental concentration, predicted no-effect concentration, prescriptions, REACh, residue, RESIDUES, RESISTANCE, risk, SELECTION, sewage, SIZE, SPECTRA, SURFACE, surface water, SURFACE-WATER, SYSTEM, WATER
  • Chemie

DOI