Impact of ethnicity, gender, and dehydration on the urinary excretion of inhaled salbutamol with respect to doping control

Objective: To examine the impact of dehydration, ethnicity, and gender on urinary concentrations of salbutamol in relation to the threshold stipulated by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). Design: Repeated measures open-label. Participants: Eighteen male and 14 female athletes (9 white males, 9 white females, 2 Afro-Caribbean males, 2 Afro-Caribbean females, 6 Asian [Indian subcontinent] males, and 4 Asian females) were recruited. All participants were nonasthmatic. Interventions: After inhalation of 800 µg or 1600 µg of salbutamol, athletes exercised in a hot controlled environment (35°C, 40% relative humidity) at a self-selected pace until a target weight loss (2% or 5%) was achieved. Main Outcome Measures: Urine concentration of free salbutamol. Results: After inhalation of 1600 µg salbutamol, 20 participants presented with a urine salbutamol concentrations above the current WADA limit (1000 ng/mL) and decision limit (1200 ng/mL) resulting in an adverse analytical finding. There were no differences according to gender or ethnic origin. Conclusions: Dehydration equivalent to a body mass loss greater than 2% concomitant to the acute inhalation of 1600 µg of salbutamol may result in a urine concentration above the current WADA limit and decision limit leading to a positive test finding independent of gender or ethnic origin. Clinical Relevance: Asthmatic athletes using salbutamol should receive clear dosing advise and education to minimize the risk of inhaling doses of salbutamol that may produce urine concentrations of salbutamol above 1200 ng/mL.
© Copyright 2014 Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences
Tagging:WADA
Published in:Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine
Language:English
Published: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2014
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1097/JSM.0000000000000072
Volume:24
Issue:6
Pages:482-489
Document types:article
Level:advanced