Daily Dispatch

Study shows hormones can boost some women’s speed

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WOMEN runners born with high testostero­ne levels enjoy a “significan­t competitiv­e advantage”, said a study yesterday 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 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 Caster Semenya and India’s Dutee Chand both endured banishment for failing so-called “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 the 400metre sprint, 400m hurdles, and 800m middle-distance events than women with low levels.

They also outperform­ed them at pole-vaulting and hammerthro­w.

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”. The study is an observatio­nal study that cannot determine conclusive­ly that higher testostero­ne is what causes the performanc­e boost, merely that an increase in one is associated with an increase in the other.

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

In 2011, the IAAF introduced so-called “hyperandro­genism regulation­s” after a highlyemot­ive and public battle with 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 Chand, 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 yesterday.

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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