Otago Daily Times

Froome’s test result ‘uncommon’

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LONDON: Chris Froome’s positive test for excessive levels of asthma drug Salbutamol at this year’s Vuelta a Espana was unusual but dehydratio­n or metabolism could have played a part, an antidoping expert said yesterday.

Tom Bassindale, a forensic scientist who works at Britain’s Sheffield Hallam University, said further tests under controlled conditions could clear Britain’s fourtime Tour de France winner if it showed other factors at play.

‘‘He gets the chance to prove that either his metabolism is particular­ly different from everyone else’s or that dose has a bigger excretion into his urine compared with the standard,’’ he said.

Froome, who has not been suspended, said he had followed medical advice and taken an increased dosage of Salbutamol — within the limits — after his asthma worsened.

Cycling’s governing body, the UCI, said yesterday the Briton’s urine sample contained twice the allowed limit of Salbutamol, a legal drug, when he was tested at the Vuelta in September.

‘‘It’s not that normal,’’ Bassindale said of the amount of Salbutamol reported.

‘‘Unless there’s a lot being done on the quiet, and these tests have been finding that lots of people can produce values higher than the threshold, then I think it is quite uncommon.’’

Team Sky rider Froome (32) risks missing next year’s Tour de France, and losing his Vuelta crown, without a satisfacto­ry explanatio­n for the failed test during the Spanish race.

Bassindale said it would be hard to recreate the same conditions as on the Vuelta.

‘‘The lab tests don’t stipulate that he will be exercising, just that it’s a lab test,’’ he said.

‘‘Trying to recreate it exactly is going to be very difficult because he’d have been dehydrated at the end of that day, as well as cumulative effects such as two weeks of cycling, and so on. But that’s the next step, to do that study.’’

Bassindale said he was not optimistic about the outcome of any investigat­ion.

‘‘The most recent similar case was I think a year ban for a similar level. That would be probably my expectatio­n of a starting point, unless his control test shows significan­tly different results than expected,’’ he said.

Italian rider Alessandro Petacchi was given a 12month suspension and stripped of his five stage victories in the 2007 Giro d’Italia for excessive Salbutamol use.

Team Sky said analysis of Froome’s urine sample showed a concentrat­ion of 2,000 nanograms per millilitre of Salbutamol compared with the World AntiDoping Agency threshold of 1,000ng/ml.

Team Sky also highlighte­d evidence of ‘‘significan­t and unpredicta­ble variations’’ in the way Salbutamol is metabolise­d and excreted.

‘‘A wide range of factors can affect the concentrat­ions, including the interactio­n of Salbutamol with food or other medication­s, dehydratio­n and the timing of Salbutamol usage before the test,’’ the team said.

The recommende­d maximum use of a standard inhaler is eight puffs over a 12hour period. Bassindale said a similar reading to Froome’s would normally require well above that number.

Some medical studies have suggested inhaled Salbutamol, rather than in tablet or liquid form, offers little in the way of performanc­e gain, however.

The drug makes it easier for an asthmatic to breathe by relaxing the muscles of the airways into the lungs, reducing wheezing.

‘‘I think the consensus is generally that it’s not that much of a performanc­e enhancer. For asthmatics it can return people who are suffering an asthmatic attack to their normal function,’’ Bassindale said. — Reuters

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Chris Froome

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