6533b83afe1ef96bd12a79ef
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Inter-individual variation of the urinary steroid profiles in Swedish and Norwegian athletes.
Lena EkströmTimo TörmäkangasLasse Vestli BaekkenJenny MullenJenny J. SchulzeMagnus EricssonMagnus EricssonIngunn Hullsteinsubject
AdultMaleAgingUrinary systemmedicine.medical_treatmentPharmaceutical SciencePhysiologyUrineNorwegian01 natural sciencesAnalytical ChemistrySteroid03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineAnabolic AgentsmedicineEnvironmental ChemistryHumans030216 legal & forensic medicineLongitudinal StudiesSpectroscopyTestosteroneUrine Specimen CollectionDoping in SportsSwedenSex CharacteristicsbiologyAthletesbusiness.industryNorway010401 analytical chemistryConfoundingbiology.organism_classificationlanguage.human_language0104 chemical sciencesCircadian RhythmSubstance Abuse DetectionEndogenous steroidslanguageFemaleSteroidsSeasonsbusinessBiomarkersSportsdescription
The steroidal module of the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) aims to detect doping with endogenous steroids, e.g. testosterone (T), by longitudinally monitoring several biomarkers. These biomarkers are ratios combined into urinary concentrations of testosterone and metabolically related steroids. However, it is evident after 5 years of monitoring steroid passports that there are large variations in the steroid ratios complicating its interpretation. In this study, we used over 11000 urinary steroid profiles from Swedish and Norwegian athletes to determine both the inter- and intra-individual variations of all steroids and ratios in the steroidal passport. Furthermore, we investigated if the inter-individual variations could be associated with factors such as gender, type of sport, age, time of day, time of year, and if the urine was collected in or out of competition. We show that there are factors reported in today's doping tests that significantly affect the steroid profiles. The factors with the largest influence on the steroid profile were the type of sport classification that the athlete belonged to as well as whether the urine was collected in or out of competition. There were also significant differences based on what time of day and time of year the urine sample was collected. Whether these significant changes are relevant when longitudinally monitoring athletes in the steroidal module of the ABP should be evaluated further.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-02-25 | Drug testing and analysisREFERENCES |