The Citizen (KZN)

World first leads to Longchamp disqualifi­cation

-

France has become the first racing country to detect a positive for the synthetic blood agent ITPP, leading to the disqualifi­cation of a Group 1 winner from last September's Arc Trials card at Longchamp.

ITPP – or myo-inositol tryspyroph­osphate – was detected in the urine sample of Akoya, winner of the Group 1 Prix Dragon for purebred arabians, and following an inquiry at France Galop headquarte­rs in Paris last week he has been stripped of the race, while his Dutch trainer, Karin van den Bos, faces a one-year suspension.

ITPP works by binding to the membrane of red blood cells or haemoglobi­n, promoting the release of oxygen.

While claims of its effectiven­ess in both human and equine athletes are disputed by some in the scientific community, it is among the serious category of doping agents which are not allowed at any stage of a horse's life cycle, as opposed to those which have therapeuti­c benefit but must be absent for competitio­n.

Van den Bos strenuousl­y denied any accusation­s of wrongdoing but was unable to provide a satisfacto­ry explanatio­n for the presence of ITPP in Akoya's post-race sample.

The positive test was returned by French racing's LCH laboratory and confirmed by the Quantilab facility in Mauritius.

With 65 employees, LCH tests samples from around 30,000 horses across racing and trotting each year.

Laboratory director Ludovic Bailly-Chouriberr­y says they have been on the lookout for ITPP for some time. "We developed the technology in 2012 and 2013 to test for ITPP, around the same time that the Hong Kong authoritie­s were researchin­g the subject," said Bailly-Chouriberr­y. "It has been used on all the samples we've received since.

"It's the first positive test for ITPP in France and I had the opportunit­y to raise the subject with my internatio­nal colleagues during our meeting in Hong Kong in December. None of the other leading laboratori­es had reported a positive case."

Bailly-Chouriberr­y added: "Doping can be quite cyclical and you can have a spate of positives for a certain substance, then it goes out of fashion.

"With the advent of the internet you can order something from anywhere in the world and so all the laboratori­es are in frequent contact to alert one another as to the next potential threat, or of any seizures of banned substances that have taken place."

A test for ITPP is also part of British racing's armoury against any potential dopers. According to the most recently published figures, 22 horses who raced in France during 2018 tested positive for a prohibited substance, as did a further five during routine visits to training yards. That equates to a rate of 0.23% of all tests carried out.

An appeal has not yet been lodged by the connection­s of Akoya, whose disqualifi­cation has led to the race being awarded to the Charles Gourdain-trained Al Shamoos. – Racingpost.com

 ??  ?? LUDOVIC BAILLY-CHOURIBERR­Y
LUDOVIC BAILLY-CHOURIBERR­Y
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa