The Mouvement Pour un Cyclisme Crédible (MPCC) was created in 2007 by a group of teams who were adamant that the UCI wasn’t doing enough to fight doping. They implemented a test for cortisol levels in 2009 and repeatedly asked the UCI and WADA to ban the use of corticosteroids. MPCC members agreed that riders with a low cortisol level would refrain from racing.
“The only natural way for cortisol level to drop to low levels is due to jet lag after long trips,” MPCC doctor Armand Mégret told Cyclingnews. “Corticoid treatments are sometimes needed for medical reasons, but when cortisol is below a certain level, people’s health is at risk. The level was first established by a panel of French endocrinology experts, Doctors Le Bouc, Duclos and Guinot, who were later joined by experts from Belgium, USA, Sweden and Italy. We keep extending the panel to take the right decisions.”
Dr. Mégret has carried out 2,315 cortisol level tests since 2010 (659 in 2016). Up to now, 13 riders have been prescribed an 8-day break from competition and weren’t able to start a race or a continue racing as a consequence. The most famous of them was defending Vuelta a España champion Chris Horner, who was taken out of the start list at the last minute by his Lampre team in 2014 after he took corticoids to treat bronchitis. Wanty-Groupe Gobert’s Enrico Gasparotto and Bjorn Thurau were asked to withdraw from the Critérium du Dauphiné this year due to low cortisol levels. MPCC tests are carried out before all Grand Tours in conjunction with the CADF (the UCI’s anti-doping foundation).
The Fancy Bears hacking group's recent leak of information gleaned from WADA's database showed that Bradley Wiggins had received a therapeutic use exemption for intramuscular injections of the corticosteroid triamcinolone acetonide ahead of the 2011 and 2012 Tours de France, and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. Wiggins and Sky have insisted that the injections were prescribed to treat hayfever and not to enhance performance.
“Had Team Sky been part of the MPCC, Bradley Wiggins would not have been able to start all three Grand Tours he took part in after he got a TUE for triamcinolone acetonid,” Dr. Mégret said. “It’s up to the doctors to find the right treatment to avoid low cortisol level. There are alternatives to corticoids.”
In an MPCC press release, Giant-Alpecin’s physician Dr. Anko Boelens stated: “Corticosteroid is still a legitimate medicine if you need it but you need to take a period of time to get well. It’s the same with corticosteroid injections. It’s a valid way of dealing with tendon problems, for example, but if you need to take it then you need to take eight days off from racing. The most important reason in all of this is because we want to eliminate the grey area.
You can read more at Cyclingnews.com
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