Home A Database of Chemical Structures and Identifiers Used in the Control of WADA Prohibited Substances
Article Publicly Available

A Database of Chemical Structures and Identifiers Used in the Control of WADA Prohibited Substances

Published/Copyright: April 1, 2021
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

WADA’s role is to help regulate doping internationally working with international sports federations and governments. The list of regulated substances is published annually (https://www.wada-ama.org/en/what-we-do/the-prohibited-list), with substances listed in sub-categories (e.g. stimulants and anabolic agents) with their “common” names, for instance fenproporex, anastrozol. WADA laboratories are expected to report the names of such detected substances and/or their metabolites to their local regulatory bodies and partner laboratories alike. Although this is straightforward for substances specifically named on the Prohibited List, there is often inconsistency or lack of clarity for non-named substances that are still prohibited as “other substances with a similar chemical structure or similar biological effect(s)” under the rules. This may generate confusion and mistakes with respect to the nomenclature used during reporting procedures. There is a clear need in providing unambiguous compound identification and guidance to the anti-doping community.

This project will provide the antidoping community with a common language—guided by IUPAC experts—for the identification and reporting of doping substances across and beyond WADA-accredited laboratories. A IUPAC Technical Report will be published with these outcomes. This will be achieved via a compilation of the WADA Prohibited List of substances in the form of a set/database of chemical structures with WADA (common) names, their InChI and InChI Keys and other relevant identifiers. In addition to the regulated substances itself, it is important to include the key metabolites used in the specific identification procedures.

The intended database will be made available as supplementary material for the Technical Report for further dissemination. The database will be maintained by the authors for three years after the completion of the project or earlier if taken up by WADA, GlobalDRO (the online drugs information system for sport) or other competent body such as the Partnership for Clean Competition. The anti-doping community will therefore be equipped with a worldwide homogenous language code to report and disseminate doping cases with partner laboratories and regulatory bodies alike. Such a project will enhance the importance of already recognised IUPAC tools in anti-doping, providing a worldwide universal language to the intended stakeholders.

For more information and comments, contact Task Group Chair Vincenzo Abbate <> | https://iupac.org/project/2020-017-2-700

Online erschienen: 2021-04-01
Erschienen im Druck: 2021-04-01

©2021 IUPAC & De Gruyter. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. For more information, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead - Full issue pdf
  2. Vice President's Column
  3. Advancing Chemistry Worldwide
  4. Features
  5. Macromolecular Science Turns 100
  6. NAO-CNR: The Italian voice at IUPAC
  7. Malta X Anniversary and COVID-19
  8. The Continued Need for CHEMRAWN within IUPAC: A Personal Account
  9. IUPAC Wire
  10. Timothy Noel is awarded the 2020 IUPAC-ThalesNano Prize for Flow Chemistry
  11. Awardees of the IUPAC 2021 Distinguished Women in Chemistry or Chemical Engineering
  12. Huizhen Liu and Banothile Makhubela have been awarded the 2020 IUPAC-CHEMRAWN VII for Green Chemistry
  13. The AsiaChem magazine is born
  14. Not an Epilogue, but a Commencement!
  15. Up for Discussion
  16. Nomenclature vs. Terminology
  17. A Path to Entrepreneurial Education
  18. Project Place
  19. Stakeholders’ Thoughts on the Future of IUPAC
  20. A Database of Chemical Structures and Identifiers Used in the Control of WADA Prohibited Substances
  21. Examples of the Introduction of Sustainable Development and Green Industrial Processes for Secondary School Chemistry and Introductory Chemistry
  22. Making an imPACt
  23. End-of-line hyphenation of chemical names (IUPAC Recommendations 2020)
  24. Chemical and biochemical thermodynamics reunification (IUPAC Technical Report)
  25. Vocabulary of radioanalytical methods (IUPAC Recommendations 2020)
  26. IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
  27. Bookworm
  28. The Periodic System: The (Multiple) Values of an Icon
  29. The Periodic Table: Past, Present, and Future
  30. EuroMedChemTalents
  31. Conference Call
  32. Bioinspired and Biobased Chemistry & Materials: N.I.C.E. 2020 hybrid
  33. Research and Innovations in Chemical Science: Paving the Way Forward
Downloaded on 28.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ci-2021-0214/html
Scroll to top button