WADA set to launch biological passport programme

Published: Tuesday | December 1, 2009


LONDON (AP):

After years of discussion and development, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) is ready to launch a global programme to monitor athletes' blood profiles for evidence of cheating.

Meeting in Stockholm this week to mark the 10th-year anniversary of its creation, WADA is expected to ratify the "athlete biological passport" system that has been under consideration since 2002.

The project involves collecting and storing athletes' blood samples and monitoring them over time for any variations that could indicate doping - without an actual positive test.

Blood profiling system

International Cycling Federation (UCI) has implemented its own blood profiling system, but WADA has finalised protocols for a programme it hopes can be adopted by federations and countries around the world.

The passport system will be up for approval tomorrow by WADA's foundation board.

"The idea is to provide the anti-doping world in general with a model so that any organisation, whether it be at the national or international level, can use this," WADA director general David Howman told The Associated Press in a telephone interview yesterday.

The blood profiles would be registered in WADA's database and could be used for target-testing or sanctioning athletes when abnormal values are recorded. This would add a major weapon in the anti-doping fight, which has traditionally relied on analysis of standard drug tests.

Howman said WADA can't force organisations to adopt the system, saying it's "not cheap" because it requires taking at least five samples from an athlete to establish a profile.

Commitment

"It's going to show commitment if sports introduce it," he said. "It's a commitment which we don't expect can be worldwide immediately. But we would hope that those who have a base to start with can get into this pretty quickly and that some countries will be ready to do it."

Howman said WADA hopes to expand the project beyond just blood profiles.

"It's looking at more biological issues, including hormonal, and so on," he said. "This has got extreme potential. We know we have the process right. It's the science we have to develop further."

Howman said the blood profile project represents the perfect way to open a new era.

"It does represent the future," he said. "We shouldn't be sitting on our laurels saying, 'Haven't we done a great job and let's have a big party.' What we're really saying is, 'We've done OK so far, but there's plenty to go, plenty of advances that ought to be made and here's a great example."

 
 
 
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