U.S.
FDA considers expanding tests for drug residues in milk
Send a link to a friend
[May 19, 2015] By
Elvina Nawaguna
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. health
regulators are reviewing current standards for assessing drug residues
in milk sold to consumers, a move that could expand testing for
veterinary drugs at a time of growing consumer concern over food safety,
health officials say.
|
The Food and Drug Administration is seeking by July 29 public
feedback on a new tool to improve testing for drug residues in
U.S.-produced milk and dairy products, a program that the agency has
not updated since 1992 when it was first implemented.
FDA currently requires tests for at least four of six beta-lactam
drugs - the most common group of antibiotics used on dairy farms -
including penicillin, ampicillin and amoxicillin.
But the agency has over the last two decades approved other
veterinary drugs for dairy producers that are not included in
routine residue-testing.
More recently approved drugs not tested for residues in milk include
flunixin, which treats pain, florfenicol, an anti-microbial, and
tulathromycin, a macrolide antibiotic used to treat bovine
respiratory disease.
"There's a need to look at other drugs, besides beta-lactams, that
are not being tested for," said Stephen Beam, who leads the
executive board of National Conference on Interstate Milk Shipments
(NCIMS).
The nonprofit group, composed of state and federal regulators and
dairy industry representatives, first requested the FDA review its
drug residue program in 2008.
U.S. consumers are showing their growing unease about the use of
drugs like antibiotics and hormones in food-producing animals,
fueling sales of organic milk and dairy products in supermarket
aisles.
The U.S. organic dairy sector grew 11 percent last year to $5.5
billion in sales, its biggest jump in six years, according to the
Organic Trade Association.
The FDA approves the use of veterinary medicines in food-producing
animals after determining that they do not harm consumers who drink
the milk. The agency says U.S. milk is generally safe.
[to top of second column] |
In March, FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine released results of a
survey of nearly 2,000 milk samples collected from across the
country in 2012 and tested for residues of 31 drugs.
While 99 percent of the samples showed no drug-residue levels of
concern, the 1 percent contained remnants from six drugs that are
not approved for lactating cows and are not subject to FDA's testing
regimen. The FDA had also not evaluated the safety of residues from
those medicines to humans.
Following that survey, the FDA said it would work with NCIMS to
broaden the range of drugs it tests for in raw milk.
"You really don't want to be doing drugs when taking your milk,"
said David Plunkett, a food safety advocate with the Center for
Science in the Public Interest. "I don't think it's too big a burden
to periodically test and make sure farmers know that someone is
looking over their shoulders."
The FDA will use the public comments on its new risk assessment to
determine what other drugs to test for and to educate dairy farmers
on avoiding illegal drug residues.
(Reporting by Elvina Nawaguna; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Phil
Berlowitz)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|