Garvican-Lewis Laura A, Vuong Victor L, Govus Andrew D, Schumacher Yorck Olaf, Hughes David, Lovell Greg, Eichner Daniel, Gore Christopher J
Mary Mackillop Institute for Health Research, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, Australia.
Australian Institute of Sport, Canberra, Australia.
Drug Test Anal. 2018 Apr;10(4):731-741. doi: 10.1002/dta.2303. Epub 2017 Nov 16.
The integrity of the athlete biological passport (ABP) is underpinned by understanding normal fluctuations of its biomarkers to environmental or medical conditions, for example, altitude training or iron deficiency. The combined impact of altitude and iron supplementation on the ABP was evaluated in endurance-trained athletes (n = 34) undertaking 3 weeks of simulated live-high: train-low (14 h.d , 3000 m). Athletes received either oral, intravenous (IV) or placebo iron supplementation, commencing 2 weeks prior and continuing throughout hypoxic exposure. Venous blood was sampled twice prior, weekly during, and up to 6 weeks after altitude. Individual ABP thresholds for haemoglobin concentration ([Hb]), reticulocyte percentage (%retic), and OFF score were calculated using the adaptive model and assessed at 99% and 99.9% specificity. Eleven athletes returned values outside of the calculated reference ranges at 99%, with 8 at 99.9%. The percentage of athletes exceeding the thresholds in each group was similar, but IV returned the most individual occurrences. A similar frequency of abnormalities occurred across the 3 biomarkers, with abnormal [Hb] and OFF score values arising mainly during-, and %retic values mainly post- altitude. Removing samples collected during altitude from the model resulted in 10 athletes returning abnormal values at 99% specificity, 2 of whom had not triggered the model previously. In summary, the abnormalities observed in response to iron supplementation and hypoxia were not systematic and mostly in line with expected physiological adaptations. They do not represent a uniform weakness in the ABP. Nevertheless, altitude training and iron supplementation should be carefully considered by experts evaluating abnormal ABP profiles.
运动员生物护照(ABP)的完整性基于对其生物标志物在环境或医疗条件(如高原训练或缺铁)下正常波动的理解。对34名耐力训练运动员进行了研究,评估高原和铁补充剂对ABP的综合影响,这些运动员进行了为期3周的模拟高住低练(每天14小时,海拔3000米)。运动员在低氧暴露前2周开始接受口服、静脉注射(IV)或安慰剂铁补充剂,并在整个低氧暴露期间持续服用。在高原前采血两次,在高原期间每周采血一次,在高原后最多采血6周。使用自适应模型计算血红蛋白浓度([Hb])、网织红细胞百分比(%retic)和OFF评分的个体ABP阈值,并在99%和99.9%的特异性水平下进行评估。11名运动员的数值在99%的特异性水平下超出计算的参考范围,8名运动员在99.9%的特异性水平下超出。每组中超过阈值的运动员百分比相似,但静脉注射组出现的个体情况最多。3种生物标志物出现异常的频率相似,[Hb]和OFF评分异常值主要出现在高原期间,%retic值主要出现在高原后。从模型中去除高原期间采集的样本后,有10名运动员在99%的特异性水平下返回异常值,其中2名运动员之前未触发该模型。总之,观察到的铁补充剂和低氧反应异常并非系统性的,大多符合预期的生理适应。它们并不代表ABP存在统一的缺陷。尽管如此,评估ABP异常情况的专家应仔细考虑高原训练和铁补充剂的问题。