Press Release - IAAF World Championships - 8/11/11
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Blood Tests for All Athletes in Daegu in
Unprecedented Anti-Doping Programme
Monaco - The IAAF will collect blood samples from ALL athletes taking part
in the IAAF World Championships in Daegu in an unprecedented anti-doping
programme.
This programme will be conducted in close co-operation with the Lausanne
WADA-accredited Anti-Doping Laboratory (LAD) and with the support of the
World Anti-Doping Agency and a number of local partners including the Daegu
Local Organising Committee, the Korean Anti-Doping Agency and the Doping
Center of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology.
The blood testing programme in Daegu is being organized in addition to the
regular doping controls that are collected at a World Championships (in
Daegu, approximately 500 urine samples shall be collected in and
out-of-competition combined).
What is the blood testing programme?
Blood samples will be collected from all athletes participating in the
World Championships.
The samples will mainly be collected at a purpose-built doping control
station located in the Athlete's village starting from 18 August 2011.
The samples will be analysed by the LAD on-site in Daegu for a first
haematological screening analysis and after the end of the Championships in
Lausanne for further analyses.
The analyses by the LAD will focus on measuring relevant parameters
(biomarkers) for individual profiling purposes within the framework of the
Athlete Biological Passport.
The fundamental principle of the Athlete Biological Passport is based on
the monitoring of an athlete's biomarkers over time. The focus is not on
the detection of prohibited substances or methods themselves, as for
traditional doping tests, but on proving the use and effect of these
substances and methods by way of abnormal variations in an athlete's
biomarkers that would otherwise be stable.
As one of the leading International Sport Federations in the fight against
doping, the IAAF has fully engaged in the implementation of the Athlete
Biological Passport at an early stage since it believes it to be a key tool
in the modern fight against doping.
Why is this programme unprecedented?
It will be the first time that a heterogeneous population of nearly 2000
elite athletes competing in a major sports event will be blood tested under
the same optimal conditions, within the same time period.
The blood testing will cover all disciplines in Athletics and a wide range
of relevant biomarkers. Notably, the analyses will not only screen markers
indicating the use of EPO or blood manipulation in endurance events (as has
been the IAAF's practice to date) but also markers potentially indicating
steroid or growth hormone doping more relevant to the power disciplines.
The data collected will therefore constitute a unique database of reference
ranges for various biomarkers in elite male and female athletes competing
in different disciplines and from different ethnical backgrounds. The IAAF
considers this to constitute a major step forwards in the development of
the Athlete Biological Passport in the sport of Athletics and indeed the
Athlete Biological Passport generally.
What will the IAAF do with the results?
The results will be used:
(i) as a first "fingerprint" for athletes with no previous records at the
IAAF;
(ii) to build upon already existing athlete profiles recorded and followed
at the IAAF;
(iii) to establish the reference ranges of relevant biomarkers in a
heterogeneous population of elite male and female athletes.
How will the IAAF follow-up on the results?
Suspicious results from the screening analyses performed on-site could,
where appropriate, trigger follow-up target tests in Daegu in urine
(notably for EPO) and/or further analyses for prohibited substances or
prohibited methods in blood in Lausanne.
All results can ultimately be used in support of an anti-doping rule
violation if an athlete's overall biological profile is found to be
consistent with the use of a prohibited substance or a prohibited method,
in accordance with IAAF Anti-Doping Rules and Regulations.
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