Abstract

BackgroundRecombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) can improve human performance and is therefore frequently abused by athletes. As a result, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) introduced the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) as an indirect method to detect blood doping. Despite this progress, challenges remain to detect blood manipulations such as the use of microdoses of rHuEpo.MethodsForty-five whole-blood transcriptional markers of rHuEpo previously derived from a high-dose rHuEpo administration trial were used to assess whether microdoses of rHuEpo could be detected in 14 trained subjects and whether these markers may be confounded by exercise (n = 14 trained subjects) and altitude training (n = 21 elite runners and n = 4 elite rowers, respectively). Differential gene expression analysis was carried out following normalisation and significance declared following application of a 5% false discovery rate (FDR) and a 1.5 fold-change. Adaptive model analysis was also applied to incorporate these markers for the detection of rHuEpo.ResultsALAS2, BCL2L1, DCAF12, EPB42, GMPR, SELENBP1, SLC4A1, TMOD1 and TRIM58 were differentially expressed during and throughout the post phase of microdose rHuEpo administration. The CD247 and TRIM58 genes were significantly up- and down-regulated, respectively, immediately following exercise when compared with the baseline both before and after rHuEpo/placebo. No significant gene expression changes were found 30 min after exercise in either rHuEpo or placebo groups. ALAS2, BCL2L1, DCAF12, SLC4A1, TMOD1 and TRIM58 tended to be significantly expressed in the elite runners ten days after arriving at altitude and one week after returning from altitude (FDR > 0.059, fold-change varying from 1.39 to 1.63). Following application of the adaptive model, 15 genes showed a high sensitivity (≥ 93%) and specificity (≥ 71%), with BCL2L1 and CSDA having the highest sensitivity (93%) and specificity (93%).ConclusionsCurrent results provide further evidence that transcriptional biomarkers can strengthen the ABP approach by significantly prolonging the detection window and improving the sensitivity and specificity of blood doping detection. Further studies are required to confirm, and if necessary, integrate the confounding effects of altitude training on blood doping.

Highlights

  • Recombinant human erythropoietin can improve human performance and is frequently abused by athletes

  • According to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) technical document (i.e. TD2014EPO), SARPAGE is currently recommended for Recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) detection in both the initial and confirmation testing procedures [5]

  • The average coefficient of variation (CV) was 10.6% across all samples analysed. 171 (98.3% of 174) and (96.4% of 169) samples under rHuEpo and placebo administration were available for the haematological analysis, respectively. of 168 Micro-Dose Study (MDS) exercise samples (i.e. 14 subjects × 2 trials × 6 exercise samples) were available for the QuantiGene Plex 2.0 Assay (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, USA) analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) can improve human performance and is frequently abused by athletes. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) introduced the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) as an indirect method to detect blood doping Despite this progress, challenges remain to detect blood manipulations such as the use of microdoses of rHuEpo. The performance-enhancing drug recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) stimulates red blood cell production and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) prohibits its use, is frequently abused by athletes. According to the WADA technical document (i.e. TD2014EPO), SARPAGE is currently recommended for rHuEpo detection in both the initial and confirmation testing procedures [5] Despite these advances, important limitations in detection of the direct approach have prompted a paradigm shift to the indirect identification of the effect of the prohibited method and/or substance

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