Can an athlete take testosterone without having
obtained a therapeutic use exemption (TUE) from the authorities and eventually get
a reduced sanction when he is tested and found ‘positive’?
Yes, he can. At least in India that is possible as has
been established through an order given by the National Anti-Doping
Disciplinary Panel (NADDP) in the case of an athlete last February.
The athlete, a javelin thrower from Punjab, had tested
positive for testosterone in the all-India Police Championships in November, 2014.
His T/E ratio showed 13.0, well above the prescribed limit of 4.0. Isotope
ratio measurement spectrometry (IRMS) analysis confirmed the use of exogenous (outside
the body) steroid.
The athlete happened to be a second-time offender. He
was handed down a three-year suspension for his second offence, the first one
having come in 2009. That was for stanozolol, and he copped a two-year ban then.
The 2014 offence was also handled under the 2009 rules
even though the final hearing in the case was held on 7 December, 2015.
Went by doctor's advice
The athlete’s defence mainly hinged on the premise
that he had taken medicines as prescribed by his doctor. In his written
submission he stated, according to the order, that he “was suffering (sic) from
infertility and taking treatment…” The athlete also submitted medical records
of his wife to support his arguments. He submitted that he had been taking
medicines for his condition “much prior” to the competition in which he tested
positive.
The athlete pleaded that he was “not well literate”
(sic) as per the order and did not have knowledge of English medicines. His
doctor apparently prescribed him Andriol Testocaps (testosterone in capsule
form).
The National Anti Doping Agency (NADA) argued before a
panel headed by Mr. Ramnath that the athlete did not obtain a TUE for the use
of testosterone. It said the athlete had not disclosed in his doping control form that he was undergoing testosterone
therapy.
It further argued that the athlete had taken nearly
five months to submit his defence and the submissions made by the athlete were
afterthoughts and “documents produced on record have been obtained by
fraudulent means and should not be taken into consideration.”
NADA also argued that it was the duty of the athlete
to ensure that no prohibited substance entered his body and it was also his
duty to advise his doctor that he was an athlete and was bound by certain
rules.
'Documents authentic'
The panel ruled: “NADA could not establish that
medical documents of athlete and his wife are fraudulent/manipulated after
athlete was found guilty of violating anti-doping rules 2010. As the perusal of
medical documents of athlete are of dated (sic) 07-07-2014 and 10-08-2014 and
27-09-2014 and the consulting doctor is Dr…, MD, Consulting Physician. No
evidence was submitted from the side of NADA to show these papers are
frivolous. Secondly the medical documents filed by the athlete, of her (sic) wife were original and they are dated 30-06-2014…”
The order, dated 5 Feb, 2016, further stated: “The submission of NADA with
regard to non-submission of facts of taking medicines at the time of sample
collection while filing the doping control form or not obtaining TUE can be
said (sic) maximum lapses on the part of athlete. As the athlete already submitted
(sic) in written reply that he was not well educated and did not have knowledge
of English medicines and hail from village farmer’s family (sic).”
(A TUE panel, normally comprising doctors, takes up applications for exemptions from athletes for use of banned substances on medical grounds. A TUE granted or rejected by an anti-doping agency can be reviewed by WADA.)
(A TUE panel, normally comprising doctors, takes up applications for exemptions from athletes for use of banned substances on medical grounds. A TUE granted or rejected by an anti-doping agency can be reviewed by WADA.)
Case of a weightlifter in 2010
In a similar case involving a weightlifter who was
also advised testosterone therapy for “infertility”, a disciplinary panel had ruled
in August, 2010 that the contention of the athlete was valid and imposed no
ineligibility.
On an appeal from WADA, however, an appeal panel
headed by Justice C. K. Mahajan (retd), set aside the disciplinary panel ruling in July 2011 and imposed a two-year sanction on the lifter.
Almost simultaneously another case of an athlete, a
woman sprinter from Tamil Nadu, had also ended up in similar fashion. That was
a case of stanozolol usage, prescribed by a doctor. The disciplinary panel
ruled in favour of the athlete; the Mahajan panel ruled otherwise. The sprinter’s stanozolol case was brought into the arguments by NADA during the javelin
thrower’s recent case, but it made no impact. The lifter’s case was apparently
not mentioned.
The Mahajan panel wrote in the
order that imposed a two-year suspension on the weightlifter: “In order to eliminate
or reduce the period of ineligibility the respondent has to establish that he
bears no fault or negligence for the violation of the Anti Doping Rules and if
he is successful then the period of ineligibility shall be eliminated. We are
unable to uphold this finding.
“The question that needs to be answered
that whether the respondent bore no fault or negligence. The respondent admits
during hearing that he took substances that caused adverse analytical finding
in the test. Therefore we can safely conclude that the respondent would have
discussed treatment therapy with his doctor and its
effects in relation to the Anti
Doping Rule violation.
“A sanction cannot be completely
eliminated on the basis of no fault or negligence even when the administration
of the prohibited substance has been done by the athlete’s physician/doctor
without disclosure to the athlete. In order to benefit from an elimination of
the period of ineligibility for no fault or negligence, the athlete
must establish that he did not know
or suspect and could not reasonably have
known or suspected, even with the
exercise of the utmost caution, that he had
used or been administered the
prohibited substance.
Athlete's responsibilities
“In the present case the respondent
did not establish that he took any
precaution or made any inquiry to
assess whether the medical treatment he was following was free from prohibited
substances. He did not either demonstrate having informed his doctor that he
was an athlete, bound by a duty of care to avoid the ingestion of any
prohibited substance. It is true that the medical
treatment was prescribed by the
respondent’s doctor. However, the respondent
cannot hide behind his doctor’s
ignorance of the Anti Doping rules in order to
escape from sanctions due to Anti
Doping Rule violation.
“The medical treatment prescribed
by the doctor does not dispense the athlete to control if the medicine he is
prescribed contain prohibited substance. The respondent has not established
that he exercised utmost caution and therefore that he bore no fault or
negligence. The respondent has also not shown any truly exceptional circumstance
to warrant reduction of the otherwise applicable period of ineligibility. It is
the duty of the athlete to ascertain that the drug he was prescribed for a long period of
time does not contain any prohibited substance. If the athlete fails to exercise
this caution he should not get the benefit of no fault or negligence/no significant
fault or negligence.”
A TUE for testosterone use is very rare in anti-doping
parlance. Here in the case of the javelin thrower there was no TUE but medical
prescriptions and laboratory investigation reports. Once again, as had been the
case in several instances in the past, the “village” background of the athlete
and his inability to read and understand the medicines prescribed in English
went in favour of the athlete.
Sanction reduced twice
As for arriving at a sanction of three years for a
second offence the panel stated: “…the only consideration left before the panel
is to see how much ineligibility be reduced under Article 10.7.1 wherein a table
has been prescribed for second violation (sic), therefore, for the second
violation the panel is of the view to sanction (sic) one half of the period of
ineligibility which comes to 3 years for No Significant Fault & Negligence
in the table indicated below”.
The table is a reference point for administering
sanctions under the 2009 WADA Code. Various combinations of offences have been
given in the table. In this case it happened to be one of “No significant fault
or negligence” (as deemed by the panel) in combination with a previous offence
that could be described as ‘standard’ since a maximum sanction of two years was
given in the earlier case.
Now, NSF (no significant fault or negligence) clubbed
with ‘St’ (standard) on the table gives a sanction of 6 to 8 years.
The panel apparently came to the conclusion that this
six or eight could be further reduced to half if “no significant fault or
negligence” had been established.
That amounted to a reduction being granted twice over
after having concluded that this was a case “no significant fault or negligence”
and based on that conclusion this could be fitted into the 6-8 year bracket.
It is pertinent to point out here that had the panel
come to the conclusion that the second offence was also “standard”, then a
combination of two “standard” would have meant a sanction of eight years to
life.
The panel had to understand from the table meant for sanctions
for multiple violations that once the nature of the offence was determined by
it as ‘reduced sanction’ (RS), ‘standard’ (St) or ‘no significant fault or
negligence’ (NSF) etc and placed against the table to determine what could be
the punishment for a second offence, there could be no further reduction except
the range prescribed in the table.
In December last year, in a similar case like that of
the javelin thrower, an appeal panel upheld the decision of a disciplinary
panel which arrived at the same conclusions about reduction of the punishment
under the “no significant fault or negligence” rule. In that case, also that of
an athlete, it was reduced to four years though the applicable sanction was six
to eight years.
Once the appeal panel had set a precedent, it was
expected that other panels would follow suit though it was not a binding
precedent.
(Updated 5 May 2016)
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