Doping: Lab director hits back at ex-WADA head over testing
criticism
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[April 23, 2019]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - The director of a
top Belgian laboratory has criticized former World Anti-Doping
Agency (WADA) head David Howman for suggesting drug testing was
stuck in the 1970s and needed to be more innovative.
Howman, in an address to an anti-doping conference in London last
week, had said urine analysis had not advanced much over the decades
and that testing was not catching the real cheats.
"We're still in a position where we're getting the same number of
positive cases each year, and many of them are in the category of
what I call the 'dopey dopers' - the inadvertent dopers, or the ones
who are just darned stupid," he said.
Professor Peter van Eenoo, director of the WADA-accredited
laboratory at the University of Ghent, said Howman had got it wrong.
"It's incredible that somebody said this," he told Reuters in a
telephone interview. "What he says is the percentage of positive
samples hasn't changed much over the years. And therefore science
has not made any progress.
"What he completely forgets is that for every step of progress we
made, of course, the others adapt."
Howman, who left the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in 2016, is now
chairman of the Athletics Integrity Unit board and has previously
criticized his former employers for failing to support clean
athletes and for allowing the reinstatement of Russia's anti-doping
agency.
Van Eenoo said the substances being used, the doses and how they
were being used by drugs cheats had changed over the decades.
Data from re-testing, using urine samples from the 2008 Beijing and
2012 London Olympics, had also demonstrated the advances of science.
"There were about 10,000 samples, 25 positives. What they've done is
stored all those samples and re-tested 1,000 of these negative
samples," he said.
"Out of those 1,000 samples, 100 at re-testing later turned out to
be positive. That is only through scientific progress, because
nothing has changed. It's the same urine.
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Director General of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) David Howman
talks to reporters at the WADA symposium in Lausanne, Switzerland,
March 14, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
"And because they know we can now detect substances for a longer
period, they (athletes) switch to other substances or take them in
smaller doses. So they adapt everything and that is only pushed by
scientific progress."
'GOLD STANDARD'
Van Eenoo said urine testing, first introduced at an Olympics in
1968, had its limitations but would remain the 'gold standard' for
some time to come.
He accepted that some substances, such as growth hormone, were hard
to detect in urine and that blood was a better indicator of the
effectiveness of drugs.
"That's why we are now investing in looking into blood concentration
-- dried blood spots, those kind of things -- to complement urine,"
he said.
"If we are looking at a zero tolerance policy which is important for
most of the substances and especially those which are most
performance-enhancing -- steroids, EPO -- then urine is the gold
standard and will remain for quite a long time to come."
Van Eenoo said it was difficult to look for 400 or 500 substances in
a drop of blood.
"So that's why I'm saying urine as a first and then for some of
these substances where you have issues... you can re-analyze that
drop of blood only for one or two substances," he added.
"This makes absolute sense and we need to progress in that
direction. That's additional scientific progress, it doesn't mean
that the scientific progress we've made so far doesn't exist."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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