Detection Of Testosterone Microdosing In Women
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Type
ThesisThesis type
Masters by ResearchAuthor/s
Savkovic, SashaAbstract
The ready detectability of synthetic androgens by mass spectrometry (MS)-based antidoping tests has reoriented androgen doping to using testosterone (T) which must be distinguished from its endogenous counterpart making detection of exogenous T harder. This study investigated urine ...
See moreThe ready detectability of synthetic androgens by mass spectrometry (MS)-based antidoping tests has reoriented androgen doping to using testosterone (T) which must be distinguished from its endogenous counterpart making detection of exogenous T harder. This study investigated urine and serum steroid and hematological profiling individually and combined to determine the optimal detection model for T administration in women. Twelve healthy females provided six paired blood and urine samples over two weeks prior to treatment consisting of 12.5 mg T in a topical transdermal gel applied daily for seven days. Paired blood and urine samples were then obtained at the end of treatment and days 1, 2, 4, 7 and 14 days later. Compliance with treatment and sampling was high and no adverse effects were reported. T treatment significantly increased serum and urine T, serum DHT, urine epitestosterone (E) and urine T/E ratio with a brief window of detection (2-4 days) as well as total and immature (medium and high fluorescence) reticulocytes which remained elevated over the full 14 post-treatment days. The OFF and ABPS scores were not discriminatory. The optimal multivariate model to identify T exposure combined serum T, urine T/E ratio with three hematological variables (% high fluorescence reticulocytes, mean corpuscular hemoglobin and volume) with the five variables providing 93% correct classification (4% false positive, 10% false negatives). Hence combining select serum and urine steroid MS variables with reticulocyte measures can achieve a high but imperfect detection of T administration to healthy females.
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See moreThe ready detectability of synthetic androgens by mass spectrometry (MS)-based antidoping tests has reoriented androgen doping to using testosterone (T) which must be distinguished from its endogenous counterpart making detection of exogenous T harder. This study investigated urine and serum steroid and hematological profiling individually and combined to determine the optimal detection model for T administration in women. Twelve healthy females provided six paired blood and urine samples over two weeks prior to treatment consisting of 12.5 mg T in a topical transdermal gel applied daily for seven days. Paired blood and urine samples were then obtained at the end of treatment and days 1, 2, 4, 7 and 14 days later. Compliance with treatment and sampling was high and no adverse effects were reported. T treatment significantly increased serum and urine T, serum DHT, urine epitestosterone (E) and urine T/E ratio with a brief window of detection (2-4 days) as well as total and immature (medium and high fluorescence) reticulocytes which remained elevated over the full 14 post-treatment days. The OFF and ABPS scores were not discriminatory. The optimal multivariate model to identify T exposure combined serum T, urine T/E ratio with three hematological variables (% high fluorescence reticulocytes, mean corpuscular hemoglobin and volume) with the five variables providing 93% correct classification (4% false positive, 10% false negatives). Hence combining select serum and urine steroid MS variables with reticulocyte measures can achieve a high but imperfect detection of T administration to healthy females.
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Date
2021Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Concord Clinical SchoolAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare