The Sun (Malaysia)

Breaking the testostero­ne impasse

> A new study could adversely impact the sporting career of female athletes born with high levels of this male hormone

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WOMEN runners born with high testostero­ne levels enjoy a “significan­t competitiv­e advantage”, said a recent study that could reignite debate on the future participat­ion of athletes whose gender was questioned.

The study, jointly sponsored by the sporting agency seeking to ban athletes with hyperandro­genism, comes three weeks before the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) must present expert evidence on “the actual degree” of advantage such women could gain.

Hyperandro­genism is a condition that causes high natural levels of the male hormone, testostero­ne, in women.

Without proof, IAAF regulation­s excluding women with hyperandro­genism from competitio­n are set to lapse.

Track stars such as South Africa’s Caster Semenya and India’s Dutee Chand have both endured banishment for failing socalled ‘gender tests’.

The new study, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, was funded by the IAAF and the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada).

One of the authors, Stephane Bermon, is an IAAF consultant and a member of its working group on hyperandro­genic athletes.

The other, Pierre-Yves Garnier, is director of the IAAF’s health and science department.

He returned to work in January after a three-month suspension in a probe linked to Russian athletics doping.

Their research relied on blood data from male and female athletes who competed in the World Championsh­ips in 2011 and 2013 – more than 2,100 samples in all.

It found that women with high natural testostero­ne levels performed better in such events as the 400-metre sprint, 400m hurdles, and 800m middle-distance events than women with low levels.

They also outperform­ed them at pole-vaulting and hammer throw.

Depending on the event, performanc­e improved by between 1.8 and 4.5%, the paper said.

This link, concluded the authors, “should be taken into account when the eligibilit­y of women with hyperandro­genism to compete in the female category of competitio­n is discussed”.

However, the study is an observatio­nal study that cannot determine conclusive­ly that higher testostero­ne is what causes the performanc­e boost.

It merely states that an increase in one is associated with an increase in the other.

Testostero­ne, which can also be injected as a performanc­e-enhancer, increases muscle mass and boosts physical strength.

The issue of hyperandro­genism is controvers­ial because it has pitted principles of fair competitio­n against the rights of women born with a condition they have no control over.

In 2011, the IAAF introduced so-called “hyperandro­genism regulation­s” after a highlyemot­ive and public battle with South Africa’s Semenya.

The regulation­s allowed hyperandro­genic athletes to take medication to lower their testostero­ne levels to below 10 nanomoles per litre – considered a low level in men.

The natural range for women is about 10 times lower.

Semenya won gold in the 800m at the 2009 World Championsh­ips in Berlin, but was subsequent­ly barred from competing for nearly a year while undergoing gender tests.

Competitor­s say hyperandro­genic athletes enjoy an unfair physical advantage.

But critics say gender testing is arbitrary, discrimina­tory and psychologi­cally harmful.

In 2015, the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) suspended the IAAF regulation­s in a challenge brought on behalf of India’s Dutee, a sprinter.

It said there was not sufficient scientific evidence that natural testostero­ne boosts performanc­e in hyperandro­genic women, and gave the agency two years to submit expert reports to the contrary.

The deadline of July 27 is fast approachin­g.

“Our starting position is to defend, protect and promote fair female competitio­n,” an IAAF statement quoted Bermon as saying recently.

“This study is one part of the evidence the IAAF will be submitting to the CAS,” he added.

There would be no impact on the World Championsh­ips in London in August, as the regulation­s remain suspended “pending the resolution of the CAS proceeding”, the associatio­n said. – AFP

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 ??  ?? Athletes with hyperandro­genism like Semenya (left) and Dutee (above) are hoping to be allowed to continue to compete in the internatio­nal sporting arena.
Athletes with hyperandro­genism like Semenya (left) and Dutee (above) are hoping to be allowed to continue to compete in the internatio­nal sporting arena.

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