WADA Study Finds Low Prevalence Of TUEs Among Olympic And Paralympic Athletes

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has announced its findings in a study on Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs) in Olympic and Paralympic Athletes. Results found that across four Olympic Games, TUEs were present in 0.90% of athletes while the four Paralympic Games had a total TUE prevalence of 2.76%.

TUEs allow for athletes with “legitimate medical conditions” to receive treatment while training and competing in their respective sports. This means that athletes can take medications that are listed under the WADA prohibited list if they have a legitimate medical condition.

There have been concerns of potential abuse of TUEs and athletes who received TUEs when they did not have “legitimate medical conditions.” The claims have been a frequent retort to critics of doping violations in China and Russia, with individuals from those countries pointing to the Fancy Bear leaks by Russian hackers that alleged to show TUEs of top American Olympians like Caeleb Dressel. The veracity of those leaks was never confirmed.

WADA Medical Director, Dr. Alan Vernec spoke on the study, “The results of this study provide objective data to dispel some of the concerns and misconceptions surrounding TUEs that they are prone to misuse or serve as a means for ‘legitimized’ doping.”

WADAs study included four Olympic Games and four Paralympic Games. Across the four Olympics, 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, and 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, a total of 328 TUEs were found. These 328 TUEs came from 258 athletes. This means that the prevalence was a total of 0.90%.

Glucocorticoids at the 2016 Rio Olympics and stimulants at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics were the most frequently observed TUEs. These results are similar to a study published in 2020 by The British Journal of Sports Medicine. That study found a TUEs had a prevalence of 0.9% from the 2010-2018 Olympic Games.

The four Paralympic Games also took place in 2016 Rio, 2018 Pyeongchang, 2020 Tokyo, and 2022 Beijing. 364 substances from 272 athletes were approved in total at the four Paralympics. This resulted in a prevalence of 2.76%. Diuretics in Rio and stimulants in Tokyo were the most common TUEs.

Read the full study here. 

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Highlevelswimmer
8 hours ago

Meaningless study. Its been mentioned in the comments but for this to be effective we need data on % of athletes per country with TUE’s, % of athletes who win, podium and made finals with TUE’s, Most common TUE’s, the distribution of TUE’s per sport, the ratio of male to female, and how it compares to the general population of people taking prescriptions per country. If it comes out that 0.9% of athletes were on TUE’s but 50% of them made finals and 25% of them won a medal and 10% won gold then we need to rethink how TUE’s are regulated. Also a more in depth study could benefit coaches and athletes if it turns out that over 50%… Read more »

jeff
Reply to  Highlevelswimmer
8 hours ago

I did see some stat that Olympians who have exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (formerly referred to as exercise-induced asthma) are more likely to medal than those who don’t have it

DK99
17 hours ago

‘Abuse of TUE’s’ is an interesting one. Before Tokyo Kyle Chalmers admitted to needing 12 cortisone injections in his shoulder, which you need a TUE for, and he said he had the same injections for these games. That seems a fairly liberal use of TUE’s to me, potentially… abusive?

Sven
Reply to  DK99
10 hours ago

I don’t think there’s anything performance enhancing about it, but it is very risky to do that many shots.

Troyy
Reply to  DK99
8 hours ago

Glucocorticoids like cortisone are only banned in competititon so don’t require a TUE out of competition.

Swimmin’ in the south
17 hours ago

While proving very little abuse of TUEs it may also suggest that Olympians are basically generally healthy people.

BingBopBam
17 hours ago

Woah, never heard about the alleged TUE leak on Dressel. Was it ever explained what exactly his alleged TUE was?

Alaverga
Reply to  BingBopBam
17 hours ago

Probably exogenous estrogen

swimmer dad
Reply to  BingBopBam
16 hours ago

I would not be surprised if it is anxiety-related.

Mr Piano
Reply to  BingBopBam
13 hours ago

He had an incident at a junior nationals meet in 2013 when he had trouble breathing, and was taken to the hospital. It might be asthma.

https://swimswam.com/breaking-dressel-taken-jr-nats-ambulance/

DutchinUSA
17 hours ago

First follow up questions before the results become meaningful: was it higher by medals vs non-medals, differentiation by sports, nationality

Troyy
18 hours ago

Study would be more interesing if it did a breakdown by nationality.

Dale
18 hours ago

Love how you conveniently leave out the fact that three countries account for 63% of TUEs: the US, Australia and France (also the three countries that did the best in swimming in Paris).

Snarky
Reply to  Dale
18 hours ago

And you know this how? Guessing? Speculation? Just plain fake news?

Chewed pull buoy
Reply to  Dale
18 hours ago

Hey man don’t hate! Americans suffer gravely from Asthma!

Bob
Reply to  Dale
17 hours ago

France is a little surprising.

Lion Swim
Reply to  Dale
17 hours ago

Can you cite your source for that stat? Not seeing it in the study.

I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
Reply to  Dale
16 hours ago

Me when i spread misinformation on the internet

Nep
Reply to  I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
5 hours ago

For those who don’t know that number is from 2016 when fancy bears leaked wada tue database

Chewed pull buoy
18 hours ago

My study says I do my job well. Cool I guess lol no conflict there. Now do a study on the use TUEs and top athletes.

About Anya Pelshaw

Anya Pelshaw

Anya has been with SwimSwam since June 2021 as both a writer and social media coordinator. She was in attendance at the 2022, 2023, and 2024 Women's NCAA Championships writing and doing social media for SwimSwam. She also attended 2023 US Summer Nationals as well as the 2024 European Championships …

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