Doping: EPO does little for cyclists' race performance, study finds
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[June 30, 2017]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Cyclists considering
turning to blood doping to boost their racing speeds may find it
does little for their performance, according to the results of a
rare study published on Friday.
Published in The Lancet Haematology journal, the research found that
while the drug recombinant human erythropoietin - commonly known as
EPO - improved high-intensity lab test scores, it barely affected
endurance and road race performances, which were similar for
cyclists given EPO and those given a placebo.
Doping, or the use of performance enhancing drugs, is a major
problem in many competitive sports worldwide, and professional
cycling has been plagued for decades by high-profile cases of
cheating.
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Yet scientific evidence about what banned substances do or don't do
is scarce, partly because it is impossible for scientists to conduct
trials with professional cyclists, who are subject to anti-doping
regulations.
For this study, researchers recruited 48 well-trained amateur male
cyclists aged between 18 and 50 and, in a blinded trial, gave half
of them weekly injections of EPO, and the other half placebo
injections over a period of eight weeks.
The doses used were consistent with known practices in professional
cycling, the researchers said.
EPO promotes the production of red blood cells, and it is assumed it
will lead to increased delivery of oxygen to the muscles and
therefore improve performance.
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The 104th Tour de France- Training ahead of the weekend's start -
Duesseldorf, Germany - June 29, 2017 - A worker decorates a bridge
along the first stage of the Tour de France. REUTERS/Christian
Hartmann
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The cyclists then underwent a series of tests to
evaluate different types of performance parameters. The first was a
high intensity ride in a laboratory involving a ramp test, where
pedalling resistance was increased every five minutes until
exhaustion. The second, similar to a time trial, was a 45-minute
lab-based endurance test at the highest power output.
The third test, 12 days after the final injections, involved a
110-km (68-mile) ride followed by a 21.5-km road race up Mont
Ventoux, which often features in the Tour de France.
"We found that while (EPO) increased performance in a laboratory
setting on high intensity tests, the differences largely disappeared
in endurance tests, and were undetectable in a real-world cycling
race," said Jules Heuberger, who co-led the study at the Centre for
Human Drug Research in the Netherlands.
He said the findings, which go against claims in some sports
literature that EPO can have great effects, may reduce the incentive
for athletes to consider blood doping.
(Editing by Andrew Roche) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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