Central Inland Fisheries Research Institute, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700120, India.
Department of Veterinary Biochemistry, Faculty of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, West Bengal University of Animal & Fishery Sciences, 37, K. B. Sarani, Belgachia, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700037, India.
Environ Monit Assess. 2023 Aug 2;195(9):1015. doi: 10.1007/s10661-023-11569-z.
India at present is one of the leading countries in antimicrobial drug production and use, leading to increasing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and public health problems. Attention has mainly been focused on the human and food animals' contribution to AMR neglecting the potential contribution of the perceptibly degraded aquatic environment in India. The paper reviews the available published literature in India on the prevalence of antimicrobial residues and their dissemination pathways in wastewater of pharmaceutical industries, sewage treatment plants, hospitals, riverine, community pond water, and groundwater. The prevalence of antimicrobial residue concentration, pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria antimicrobial resistant bacteria (ARB), their drug resistance levels, and their specific antimicrobial resistant genes (ARGs) occurring in various water matrices of India have been comprehensively depicted from existing literature. The concentration of some widely used antimicrobials recorded from the sewage treatment plants and hospital wastewater and rivers in India has been compared with other countries. The ecotoxicological risk posed by these antimicrobials in the various water matrices in India indicated high hazard quotient (HQ) values for pharmaceutical effluents, hospital effluents, and river water. The degraded aquatic environment exhibited the selection of a wide array of co-existent resistant genes for antibiotics and metals. The review revealed improper use of antibiotics and inadequate wastewater treatment as major drivers of AMR contaminating water bodies in India and suggestion for containing the challenges posed by AMR in India has been proposed.
目前,印度是抗菌药物生产和使用的主要国家之一,这导致了抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)的不断增加和公共卫生问题。人们主要关注人类和食用动物对抗生素耐药性的贡献,而忽视了印度明显退化的水生环境的潜在贡献。本文综述了印度已发表的关于制药工业、污水处理厂、医院、河流、社区池塘水和地下水废水中抗菌药物残留及其传播途径的文献。从现有文献中全面描述了印度各种水基质中抗菌药物残留浓度、致病性和非致病性细菌抗菌耐药菌(ARB)、其耐药水平以及特定抗菌耐药基因(ARGs)的情况。印度污水处理厂和医院废水及河流中记录的一些常用抗菌药物的浓度与其他国家进行了比较。这些抗菌药物在印度各种水基质中造成的生态毒理学风险表明,制药废水、医院废水和河水的危害系数(HQ)值很高。退化的水生环境对抗生素和金属共存的耐药基因进行了选择。该综述揭示了印度对抗生素的不当使用和废水处理不足是导致水体中 AMR 污染的主要因素,并提出了控制印度 AMR 所面临挑战的建议。