Investigating Antimicrobial Use at an Equine Veterinary Hospital 

A retrospective study evaluated antimicrobial prescribing practices at Cornell’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital to identify areas of possible improvement.

This article originally appeared in the Spring 2025 issue of EquiManagement. Sign up here for a FREE subscription to EquiManagement’s quarterly digital or print magazine and any special issues.

Surgery on horse, a common scenario in which antimicrobials would be administered at an equine hospital.
All horses that underwent surgery at Cornell’s Veterinary Teaching hospital in this retrospective study were treated with antibiotics, including many horses that had what were considered “clean” surgeries. | Getty Images

A key strategy for reducing antibiotic use in equine practice is to limit prophylactic administration and only treat horses with evidence of infection.  

“Every time we prescribe an antibiotic, we are creating a potential risk of resistance, both the pathogen causing the disease and the natural flora of the patient,” said Pamela Velarde, DVM, a resident in large animal medicine at Cornell University’s Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine. “Minimizing the use of the World Health Organization’s list of high-priority and critically important antimicrobials (HPCIAs and CIAs) in our veterinary patients is imperative, and antibiotics in general should only be prescribed when infection is documented and clinically significant.”  

Study of Antimicrobial Prescribing Practices at an Equine Hospital

Velarde and colleague Gillian Perkins, DVM, DACVIM, recently completed a retrospective study of antimicrobial prescribing practices at Cornell’s own Veterinary Teaching Hospital to identify areas of possible improvement. They presented their findings at the 2024 American Association of Equine Practitioners Convention, held Dec. 7-11 in Orlando, Florida. 

Of the total equine visits in 2021, approximately one-third were prescribed systemic antimicrobials, including a small percentage of HPCIAs, to treat musculoskeletal, upper respiratory, reproductive, gastrointestinal, and other infections.  

“Out of the 543 horses prescribed an antibiotic, no evidence of infection existed in almost half of the horses,” said Velarde. “Only a small percentage (< 15%) of the horses prescribed an antibiotic had confirmed infections based on culture.”  

For horses undergoing surgery, all were treated with antibiotics, including many horses that had what were considered “clean” surgeries.  

“Key findings of our data were that approximately a third of the horses were prescribed antibiotics, and culture and sensitivity were only infrequently done,” she said. “Overall, limited prescriptions included HPCIAs. These data suggest that we can do a better job of antimicrobial stewardship for cases with no evidence of infection and for clean surgeries. We need to continue to critically evaluate if horses in these scenarios should be prescribed antimicrobials at all.”  

Next Steps

The next phase of this study is to establish antimicrobial stewardship guidelines for the hospital using a three-tiered approach following WHO guidelines on medically important antimicrobials: increasing justification for use, need for culture and sensitivity, and approval by the Infection Control Committee.  

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