Longitudinal monitoring of endogenous steroids in human serum by UHPLC-MS/MS as a tool to detect testosterone abuse in sports

Longitudinal monitoring of endogenous steroids in human serum by UHPLC-MS/MS as a tool to detect testosterone abuse in sports / Federico Ponzetto, Florence Mehl, Julien Boccard, Norbert Baume, Serge Rudaz, Martial Saugy, Raul Nicoli. - (Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 408 (2016) 3 (January); p. 705-719). -

  • PMID: 26677027.
  • DOI: 10.1007/s00216-015-9185-1

Abstract

The detection of testosterone abuse in sports is routinely achieved through the 'steroidal module' of the Athlete Biological Passport by GC-MS(/MS) quantification of selected endogenous anabolic androgenic steroids (EAAS) from athletes' urines. To overcome some limitations of the "urinary steroid profile" such as the presence of confounding factors (ethnicity, enzyme polymorphism, bacterial contamination, and ethanol), ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) measurements of blood concentrations of testosterone, its major metabolites, and precursors could represent an interesting and complementary strategy. In this work, two UHPLC-MS/MS methods were developed for the quantification of testosterone and related compounds in human serum, including major progestogens, corticoids, and estrogens. The validated methods were then used for the analyses of serum samples collected from 19 healthy male volunteers after oral and transdermal testosterone administration. Results from unsupervised multiway analysis allowed variations of target analytes to be assessed simultaneously over a 96-h time period. Except for alteration of concentration values due to the circadian rhythm, which concerns mainly corticosteroids, DHEA, and progesterone, significant variations linked to the oral and transdermal testosterone administration were observed for testosterone, DHT, and androstenedione. As a second step of analysis, the longitudinal monitoring of these biomarkers using intra-individual thresholds showed, in comparison to urine, significant improvements in the detection of testosterone administration, especially for volunteers with del/del genotype for phase II UGT2B17 enzyme, not sensitive to the main urinary marker, T/E ratio. A substantial extension of the detection window after transdermal testosterone administration was also observed in serum matrix. The longitudinal follow-up proposed in this study represents a first example of 'blood steroid profile' in doping control analysis, which can be proposed in the future as a complement to the 'urinary module' for improving steroid abuse detection capabilities.

Original document

Parameters

Science
Research / Study
Date
16 December 2015
People
Baume, Norbert
Boccard, Julien
Mehl, Florence
Nicoli, Raul
Ponzetto, Federico
Rudaz, Serge
Saugy, Martial
Country
Switzerland
Language
English
ADRV
Adverse Analytical Finding / presence
Other organisations
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV) - Lausanne University Hospital
Lausanne Laboratory for doping analysis
Université de Genève - University of Geneva
Université de Lausanne (UNIL) - University of Lausanne
Laboratories
Lausanne, Switzerland: Laboratoire Suisse d’Analyse du Dopage
Analytical aspects
Blood testing method
Mass spectrometry analysis
Testing method development
Doping classes
S1. Anabolic Agents
Substances
T/E ratio (testosterone / epitestosterone)
Testosterone
Document category
Scientific article
Document type
Pdf file
Date generated
27 March 2019
Date of last modification
7 September 2020
Category
  • Legal Source
  • Education
  • Science
  • Statistics
  • History
Country & language
  • Country
  • Language
Other filters
  • ADRV
  • Legal Terms
  • Sport/IFs
  • Other organisations
  • Laboratories
  • Analytical aspects
  • Doping classes
  • Substances
  • Medical terms
  • Various
  • Version
  • Document category
  • Document type
Publication period
Origin