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VCPR’s and Prescription Drug Use Battenkill Veterinary Bovine April 2012 A Little Quiz Not graded Not submitted to the FDA or USDA or NYS Be honest Drug Classes- OTC Over-the Counter (OTC) – – can be sold by any person or establishment without a prescription from a veterinarian. Examples: – Penicillin LA 200 Today, Tomorrow Sufficient label directions for correct use. Drug Classes - Rx Prescription (RX) – – – – can only be sold by a veterinarian or pharmacist “Caution: Federal law restricts this drug to use by or on the order of a licensed veterinarian.” Examples: Naxcel , Cystorelin Need further diagnostics or directions to be able to properly use the medication. Drug Classes - VFD Veterinary Feed Directive (VFD) - a drug intended for use in or on feed, which is limited by an approved application to use under the professional supervision of a licensed veterinarian. – Examples: Pulmotil in swine or beef or nonlactating dairy cattle feed Extra Label Use (ELU) Any use of a drug not specifically listed on the label is called “extra-label drug use” and is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under the Animal Medicinal Drug Use Clarification Act (AMDUCA) of 1994. Using a prescription or over-thecounter drug in an extra-label manner is illegal unless it is specifically recommended under the guidance of a veterinarian working in the context of a Veterinary-Client-Patient Relationship (VCPR). Examples of ELU A. B. C. Changing the dose a) giving more penicillin than is listed on the label. Changing the route of administration a) giving Banamine IM instead of IV. Changing the frequency of use a) giving Spectramast LC twice a day instead of once a day. Examples of ELU D. Giving a drug to a different production class of animal a) using Nuflour® in a lactating cow E. Giving a drug for an indication (disease) not listed on the label a) using Excede® for diarrhea F. Changing the amount of drug per injection site a) giving 20 cc penicillin in one spot Examples of Illegal Use Feed additives – – Ceftiofur – Cannot alter dose, duration, indication Cannot use more than two additives at once Cannot alter dose, duration, route of administration Baytril, Sulfa drugs – ELU use prohibited Drugs Illegal to Use in Food Animals – – – – – – – – – – – – – • Chloramphenicol • Clenbuterol • Colloidal Silver • Diethylstilbestrol (DES) • Dimetridazole (Flagyl®) • Estradiol Cypionate (ECP) • Glycopeptides (Vancomycin) • Furazolidone (Furacin Ointment) • Ipronidazole (Flagyl®) • Nitrofurans (Nitrofurazone paste or Furazone aerosol spray) • Other Nitroimidazoles (Flagyl® {Metronidiazole}) Gentian violet (Blue Coat ®) Drugs Prohibited from ELU use Sulfonamide drugs in lactating dairy cattle (Albon ®) Fluoroquinolones (Baytril ®) Phenylbutazone in female dairy cattle 20 months of age or older Ceftiofur (Excenel®, Naxcel®, Excede®, Spectramast®, Ceftiflex®)- cannot use extra-label dose, duration, frequency, or route of administration or for disease prevention Feed additives – ELU prohibited ELU is not allowed if it results in a violative food residue ZERO tolerance for any drug residues not listed as OTC, Rx, or prohibited Aminoglycosides not to be used in cattle Amikacin Gentamicin Kanamycin Neomycin- except as approved by FDA – This drug is a leading cause of violative residues in bob veal calves. Drug Holdouts Neomycin is tolerated at 7.2 ppm Gentamicin is not tolerated. Tail never comes down to 0 ppm. Stays in the kidneys for years. MONTHS Calculating Withholding Times Not an exact science because we don’t always have all the information needed. Veterinarians can use FARAD. Err on the side of waiting to sell a food product. Need to know basic info: – Animal, Age, Drug, Amount, Route, Duration, Health of animal. Examples Draxxin Treatment of pneumonia with 1.1ml under the skin for 100 pound bull calf to be sold. Treated 2/20/2012 and got better. Can we sell him today (3/12/2012)? Milk Antibiotic Residue Testing The Grade “A” Pasteurized Milk Ordinance (PMO), requires that all bulk milk tankers be sampled and analyzed for beta-lactam drug residues. Commissioner of the FDA determines frequency of screening of other drug residues through a random sampling program. Customers may also require additional testing for quality assurance purposes. Milk Antibiotic Residue Testing Tankers testing positive: loads 2008 – 0.028% 942 loads 2009 – 0.026% 2011 – 0.028% 1079 26.874 million pounds dumped 1996 – 0.104% 3520 loads out of 3.787 million tested Milk Antibiotic Residue Testing Flunixin (Banamine) milk with hold = 36 hrs after IV administration. test available now for milk Neogen Corporation product #8475 800-234-5333 1hr 15 minutes/ test. Uses wells with chemical reagent bottles. Draxxin Example This is Extra-Label Use because it is not intended for veal calves. Tolerance level is now 0, not X ppm as it would be for a non-lactating dairy animal. Need longer to hit 0. FARAD recommended 35 days, not 18 days. Sale date permissible : 3/27/12 FDA Milk Drug Residue Testing List of ~1600 farms where beef residues have been found in last year. Choose 900 of these farms. Choose 900 of their neighbors without residues. Test all for several drugs using special testing methods. Drugs Included in Plan Ampicillin Penicillin G Cloxacillin Cephapirin Sulfamethazine Sulfadiazine Sulfadimethoxine Sulfathiazole Sulfaquinoxaline Sulfapyridine Sulfachloropyridazine Sulfamerazine Oxytetracycline Tetracycline Chlortetracycline Doxycycline Tylosin Tilmicosin Erythromycin Sarafloxacin Enrofloxacin Ciprofloxacin Flunixin Bacitracin Thiabendazole Virginiamycin Tripelennamine FDA Testing Blinded – no producer information included – Avoids recalls and dumping milk Hypothesis is that the drug violators will have higher level of milk residues as well. Testing done on samples from the plant – You won’t know you are being tested Meat Antibiotic Residue Testing The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety Inspection Services (FSIS) conducts tests for antibiotics in meat destined for human consumption. Random sampling plans from healthy cows Packing plant sampling of “sick” animals Who Makes the Residues? 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Bob Veal Cows Dairy Steers Sows Non FFV Market Hogs Heifers Heavy Calves FFV Cows Beef Bulls/Stags Bovine Injection-Damaged Beef Post Mortem Conditions Mastitis Peritonitis Metritis Injection Site Residue Violator List FSIS maintains a “Residue Violator List” names and addresses of producers who have more than one meat residue violation in a 12-month period on the web Most are dairy beef and bob veal 27 farms in US/Canada 11 veal, 37 bob, 18 dairy, 3 pigs, 2 sheep, 1 beef cow (from a dairy) Repeat Violator List FDA follow up & Repeat Violators FDA at Battenkill recently. Summer 2011 problem – came in February Repeat violations can occur without chance to know and correct. One California farm – 10 violations in 2 days 17 days apart. Definitions of cattle classification Lactating cattle = cattle greater than 20 months Non-lactating cattle = only those who have never lactated. Dry cows are Lactating cows. Non-ruminating calves = calves on milk Some variation in labels due to FDA changing definitions. Causes of Antibiotic Residues Not following vet prescription or manufacturer label Accidentally milking treated cow to bulk tank Inadequate animal identification Long term residue following treatment as a calf Use of medicated milk replacers in calves Some Key Issues Leading to Residues The person(s) in charge of treating the cows are not working under a valid veterinary/client/patient relationship. Employees are not trained properly and continuously in treatment protocols and maintaining written records. The producer does not review all treatment records for veterinarian-recommended withdrawal times prior to marketing milk or meat. (Uncommon) Intentional, malicious contamination Steps to Prevent Antbiotic Residues: Establish VCPR Reduce necessary treament: – – Implement preventative health program Maintain milk quality Implement and maintain employee training of animal drug usage Use only approved OTC and Rx antibiotics Steps to Prevent Antbiotic Residues: KEEP RECORDS of antibiotic use Establish and maintain a low-risk treated animal identification system. Examples: – – – – – – Use two or more methods to ID treated cows Brightly colored leg bands that don’t fall off Segregate treated animals Paint/chalk animal Treatment board Other methods? Steps to Prevent Antbiotic Residues: Use drug residue screening test specific for the drug utilized. If in doubt – do not market. MeatSafe test from Silver Lakes Research 1-888-438-1942 Beta Lactam, Gentamicin, Sulfa Treatment Records FDA requires records be maintained for 2 years Records should be permanent – Keep records of drug purchases – – Not a chalk board!!! FDA will look for drug purchases versus use recorded Do they match? Treatment records for preventative treatments (???) – – Vaccinations Deworming Treatment Records Signature page for persons administering treatments All treatments recorded should include: – – – – – – – Treatment date Animal ID Indication/Reason (mastitis, metritis, etc) Drug used Dosage (ie. ml) Route of administration (ie. IM, SQ, IV) Initial of person administrating drug Establish a Valid VCPR Veterinarian assumes responsibility for medical judgments regarding animal health Veterinarian makes routine visits to farm to gain sufficient knowledge of animals Veterinarian available for emergency care Establish a Valid VCPR Employees aware that it is policy to follow instructions of veterinarian Veterinarian and producer establish an approved drug list Veterinarian and producer establish treatment protocols for commonly occurring medical conditions. Precautions while administering drugs Discard milk from all four quarters even when treating only one quarter with an IMM infusion. Thoroughly wash all equipment (inflations, hoses, weigh jars, etc.) that has come in contact with milk from treated cows. Keep medicated feeds separated from non-medicated feeds. Ensure that calves fed antibiotic waste milk are not sent to slaughter until withdrawal times are met. Train employees on proper injection site selection. Record the treatment information! Drug Residue Testing Make certain that drug residue test being used is appropriate for drug administered. – Ie – tetracycline and beta-lactam tests. Test milk from dry cows that freshen early Test milk from newly purchased animals Test milk when treating with ELU Bob Veal Calves and Colostrum Establish a protocol for colostrum feeding of bull calves for bob veal – – – – Use stored, untreated heifer colostrum Use dry treat with labelled neonatal calf preslaughter with hold (Spectramast DC - 0 days) Use dry treat with short recommended neonatal pre-slaughter with hold (Tomorrow - 7days) Selective dry treatment NAIS and USDA June 1 – new requirements for animal identification effective New requirements not defined yet! – – – – Permanently Id all cows? Permanently Id all animals? Likely one of the above Tags may need to have USDA symbol Battenkill Recommends Today Permanently ID ALL CALVES, including bulls WHY? – – – Slaughter facilities testing 2 out of 3 bob veal calves slaughtered Non-permanent id’s can (and do!) get mixed up Prevent residues from incorrectly being associated with your animals Silver tags available for permanent ID NYS – fill out order form or call 457-3502 – – – VT - ? Not sure yet – Free tags, you buy tagger 7S or 49 style HASCO “21P” tags Scrapie – Anna Draisey 858-1424 or 218-7540 Probably free tags and tagger MA - Tags available through clinic VCPR Form Formal agreement: – – Veterinarian assumes responsibility for the health and treatment of animals Veterinarian will be available to examine, diagnose and prescribe treatment and to provide emergency service if needed VCPR Form Formal agreement: – – – Producer agrees to follow instructions of veterinarian for medical treatment Producer will keep complete records of all treatments given to animals on the farm that may incur a food residue Producer will apply permanent, unique identification to all animals intended for food production on the farm Take Home Points Have a VCPR Follow directions – call if they are not clear Wait extra time if questioning Permanently identify with UNIQUE ID each animal Write down all treatments in a notebook. Do not throw away any drug records