Sweetwater Reporter

Doping sleuths manage to keep sunscreen from burning world track stars

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EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — They almost got burned.

Though there’s nothing novel in suggesting all 1,900 athletes who will train and compete in the sunny stadium at track world championsh­ips in Eugene, Oregon, over the next 10 days should slather up with sunscreen, in the complicate­d world of antidoping, nothing is quite that simple.

Shortly after last year’s Olympics, the urine samples of more than six dozen athletes who competed in Tokyo came back with traces of a banned stimulant. Careeralte­ring penalties loomed. But they were avoided thanks to some nimble sleuthing by antidoping scientists in the U.S. and Germany. The scientists discovered the stimulant could be found in an ingredient present in an over-thecounter sunscreen.

“I’m lathering sunscreen all over my body. People are laughing at me in the office,” said Dr. Matt Fedoruk, the chief scientist at the U.S. AntiDoping Agency, who identified the issue and also volunteere­d to be a test subject for his own study. “I’m carrying around urine bottles and sending them to the lab. And within 48 hours, we had the answer to our question.”

It’s an issue that runs more than skin deep throughout sports.

Increasing­ly sensitive instrument­s designed to detect banned substances have the ability to pick up increasing­ly minuscule amounts of those substances in an athlete’s system. In some cases, athletes ingest them intentiona­lly.

But in a growing number of instances, the banned drugs enter their systems in unintentio­nal ways: through the skin via sunscreen or eyeliner, or through contaminat­ed prescripti­on drugs or, in the particular­ly frustratin­g case of American distance runner Shelby Houlihan, through what she claims was a pork burrito tainted with traces of a banned performanc­e-enhancing drug.

“Most labs are experienci­ng really good advancemen­ts in technology,” USADA CEO Travis T. Tygart said. “But importantl­y, the science and the rules also need to advance so that we can be certain we’re not only capturing intentiona­l cheats, but also that we’re not punishing innocent athletes.”

The sunscreen sleuthing began when Fedoruk, the USADA scientist, found it strange that two athletes from diametrica­lly opposed worlds — a figure skater, Jessica Calalang, and a mixed-martial arts fighter, Rob Font — had each tested positive for 4-chlorophen­oxyacetic acid (4-CPA). That substance is a metabolite of meclofenox­ate, which is a prohibited stimulant that hadn’t been much on the antidoping radar for years.

Fedoruk started asking questions and, in a fortuitous turn, Font had kept an extensive log of everything he had eaten, or applied to his body, for months. One of them was the sunscreen.

A trip to the drugstore ensued. After about a week of Fedoruk and 11 other volunteers lathering on sunscreen, the scientists discovered that traces of 4-CPA were showing up in their urine. It came from a preservati­ve in the sunscreen.

Word spread quickly around the globe. Scientists at the antidoping lab in Cologne, Germany, where many of the tests from the Tokyo Games had been sent to be analyzed, had also been tipped off to the intel and started looking for the metabolite in an over-thecounter muscle relaxant sold in Asia.

In the end, global antidoping officials rewrote a technical paper that gave new instructio­ns on testing thresholds for 4-CPA.

Around 80 athletes at the Tokyo Games who were found to have ingested the metabolite via sunscreen didn’t endure the agony of having to prove their innocence against charges that could’ve left them befuddled and outmanned by internatio­nal antidoping officials who, at times, have offered little leeway for rules violations, no matter the cause.

These stories don’t always end this way.

Calalang’s positive test — a result of using eyeliner that contained the same preservati­ve as the sunscreen — cost her eight months of legal wrangling and a spot at world championsh­ips in 2021. Ultimately, the discovery and change in the global rulebook got her reinstated.

“If Jessica did not have the resources and support to retain a lawyer to assist her, this could have easily been another case where an innocent athlete ends up serving a lengthy ban,” her attorney, Howard Jacobs, said after her reinstatem­ent.

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