Higenamine, Anti-Doping, and Plant-Based Cuisine: A Legal Analysis of Higenamine in Sport Anti-Doping Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Origins of Higenamine
3. The Case of Mamadou Sakho
4. The Case of Daniel Guedes
5. The Case of Anzor Boltukaev
6. The NADO’s Position and further Process of Proving and Sanctioning
7. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Strict Liability is the rule which provides that it is not necessary that intent, Fault, Negligence, or knowing Use on the Athlete’s part be demonstrated by the Anti-Doping Organization in order to establish an anti-doping rule violation. |
2 | |
3 | The comment on 2021 WADC, Art. 10.2.1.1, expressly states that “while it is theoretically possible for an Athlete or other Person to establish that the anti-doping rule violation was not intentional without showing how the Prohibited Substance entered one’s system, it is highly unlikely that in a doping case under Article 2.1 an Athlete will be successful in proving that the Athlete acted unintentionally without establishing the source of the Prohibited Substance”. In an earlier edition of the WADC (i.e., WADC 2015 with 2019 amendments), there was no such a comment. |
4 | More Lithuanian cases are connected to higenamine, but this case is selected to show the most doubtful places in the whole anti-doping system. Moreover, this is a resonant and much-analyzed case in the Lithuanian media since the world champion is involved and rowing is a popular Olympic sport in Lithuania. |
5 | The final decision of this case was announced on 8 February 2021 by the Lithuanian commission for the examination of cases of anti-doping rules violation. |
6 | NADO’s letter No. S20-181 of 30 November 2020 substantiating the suspicion against athlete Ieva Adomavičiūtė. |
7 | It is important to note that laboratories are not required to quantify or report the concentration for an analyte of non-threshold Prohibited Substances detected in the urine sample. In the article, it is argued that this approach does not work with higenamine. |
8 | Considering that higenamine is present in lotus seeds and used in the production of food and dietary supplements in China and other Asian countries, researchers sought to assess the risk of the AAF. Fourteen volunteers took plumula nelumbinis capsules orally and another eleven volunteers took higenamine tablets. Urine samples were collected after 14 days and were subject to quantitative dilute-and-shoot analysis using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. The analytical results showed that urinary higenamine concentrations exceeded the WADA reporting limit of 10 ng/mL. The maximum higenamine concentration (500 ng/mL) was observed in the group which took capsules. The research revealed that higenamine concentration in urine could exceed the WADA reporting limit with a high probability after taking plumula nelumbinis tablets. The oral administration of the capsules, as mentioned above, showed a high risk of an AAF due to higenamine. More information: Yan et al. (2019). |
9 | See the ingredients of Sour Vegetable Curry Paste. Available online: https://www.thaihouse.lt/en/product/sour-vegetable-curry-paste-50g/ (accessed on 12 March 2022). It should be acknowledged that I. Adomavičiūtė could have used such a paste, although it most likely occurred far before the doping test. |
10 | CAS 2013/A/3327, Marin Cilic v. International Tennis Federation (ITF), para. 76, 88. CAS 2017/A/5015, International Ski Federation (FIS) v. Therese Johaug & Norwegian Olympic and Paralympic Committee and Confederation of Sports (NIF), para 165. |
11 | Rowing sports camps took place in Trakai (Lithuania). During these camps, the athlete cooked for herself and had some paste from Thailand. |
12 | Sakho & Anor v. World Anti-Doping Agency. England and Wales High Court (Queen’s Bench Division). 11 February 2020. |
13 | Brazilian Anti-doping Tribunal, Judgment TJD-AD nº 35/2020. Number of disciplinary proceedings: 71000.035569/2019-52. |
14 | In dubio pro reo is had in mind. |
15 | See note 13 above. |
16 | CAS 2018/A/5619, World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) v. United World Wrestling (UWW) & Anzor Boltukaev, para. 6, 7. |
17 | See the first-instance ADP decision. United World Wrestling (UWW) v. Mr Anzor Boltukaev: https://unitedworldwrestling.org/sites/default/files/2018-03/180202_panel_decision_case_anzor_boltukaev.pdf, para. 33, 34. Accessed on 12 March 2022. |
18 | CAS 2018/A/5619, World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) v. United World Wrestling (UWW) & Anzor Boltukaev, para. 67, 75, 76, 78, 80. |
19 | CAS 2009/A/1930, World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) v. ITF & Richard Gasquet, para. 5.9. |
20 | CAS 2016/A/4676, Arijan Ademi v. Union of European Football Associations. |
21 | Stanozolol is a substance prohibited at all times, both in and out of competition, and is not a specified substance. The suspension period is four years if anti-doping rule violation does not involve a specified substance (unless a player or other person can establish that it was unintentional). Ibid., pp. 6, 47. |
22 | The conventional wisdom about the causation requirement is that in reality it consists of two very different requirements for liability. The first requirement is that of “cause-in-fact”. Such conventional wisdom holds that the “cause-in-fact” requirement is the only truly causal component of the law’s two requirements, because this doctrine is the only one that corresponds to any scientific or even factual notion of causation. Whether cigarette smoking causes cancer or whether the presence of hydrogen or helium causes explosion are factual questions to be resolved by the best science the courts can muster, and these are classed as “cause-in-fact” questions. By contrast, it is contested whether the second requirement, that of “proximate” or “legal” cause, is an evaluative issue to be resolved by arguments of policy, or whether it is also a matter of causal fact. See Moore (2019). |
23 | More on a light degree of fault: CAS 2013/A/3327, Marin Cilic v. International Tennis Federation (ITF), para. 1. |
24 | ECJ C-5 19/04, Meca-Medina et Majcen v. Commission, the judgment of 18 July 2006, paragraph 47. “It must be acknowledged that the penal nature of the anti-doping rules at issue and the magnitude of the penalties applicable if they are breached are capable of producing adverse effects on competition because they could, if penalties were ultimately to prove unjustified, result in an athlete’s unwarranted exclusion from sporting events, and thus in impairment of the conditions under which the activity at issue is engaged in. It follows that, in order not to be covered by the prohibition laid down in Article 81(1) EC, the restrictions thus imposed by those rules must be limited to what is necessary to ensure the proper conduct of competitive sport.” |
25 | Case no. 246/20 concerning the disciplinary proceedings against Mr. Alex Di Giorgio. The decision of the Italian National Anti-Doping Court, dated 11 March 2021. |
26 | Enobosarm is a selective androgen receptor modulator. It was developed for the treatment of medical conditions like muscle wasting and osteoporosis; it can be used by athletes to increase physical stamina and fitness, producing effects similar to anabolic steroids. The drug is intended to target the body’s androgen receptors to cause them to respond similarly to how they would to testosterone but without side effects. Keith (2021). |
27 | On the contrary, central subjects in probability theory include discrete and continuous random variables, probability distributions, and stochastic processes, which provide mathematical abstractions of non-deterministic or uncertain processes. What matters to lawyers is the idea that linear, or so-called deterministic, equations have just one solution, whereas non-deterministic equations have multiple solutions. In the light of this article—it might be said that the author is advocating for multiple scenarios in proving NSFN rather than for one single biochemical solution. |
28 | CAS 2021/A/7755, Ieva Adomaviciute v. Lithuanian Anti-Doping Agency, para 68, 78. |
29 | “The second thing I would like to draw your attention to is that I think almost any revision of the Code was in the context of some of the big scandals. So, Festina scandal, we had the 2003 Code. We were obsessed by harmonisation. Then we had a couple of cases where we thought, <Ah, this is not justice. This is not giving justice>. So, the second revision was to be more fact specific and case specific. The third revision was absolutely in light of the Armstrong case. I’m 100% sure that we never would have a four-year ban or something like this without Armstrong”. Beloff et al. (2017, p. 153). |
30 | |
31 | As Viret notes, as a direct consequence of the zero tolerance rule, the standard model of a laboratory analysis is “qualitative”, i.e., limited to the identification of a Prohibited Substance. Laboratories are not required to measure the concentration of the substance present in the Sample in order to report an AAF unless they are dealing with a Threshold Substance. Traditional Doping Control thus relies on a binary decision mode: either a Prohibited Substance is identified and anti-doping rule violation was committed, or no Prohibited Substance is identified and no anti-doping rule violation was committed. Viret (2016, pp. 357, 359). |
32 | A short message that wild ginger is used in preparing food in the pub “Viking’s China” (later, when the Lithuanian NADO directly confronted the pub, the pub denied this fact) was presented to the hearing of the case on 15 January 2021. However, this message and the factual circumstance that Ieva Adomavičiūtė ate at this pub five days before the doping test were not enough to establish the causal link between Chinese dish consumption in the pub in question and the AAF. In other words, some evidence was submitted to demonstrate that a particular product that the athlete took could contain the substance in question. The details about the intake date, the location, and the route of intake were presented; however, these details were deemed insufficient to establish the required causal relation. In the disciplinary decision dated 8 February 2021, it was stated that “even if it were found that the Athlete could have used wild ginger as an ingredient, this would not confirm that such consumption resulted in a positive result of the Athlete’s Sample, since sufficient and convincing evidence should be provided on the quantities consumed and their influence on the Sample’s result”. |
33 | “The panel can envisage the theoretical possibility that it might be persuaded by an athlete’s simple assertion of his innocence of intent when considering not only his demeanor but also his character and history (…). Where an athlete cannot prove source, it leaves the narrowest of corridors through which such athlete must pass to discharge the burden which lies upon him”. CAS 2016/A/4534, para. 37. |
34 | In this respect, CAS precedents requiring specific evidence to be adduced that the athlete ingested a product that contained a prohibited substance cannot be treated in an automatically constant way. These precedents might sound reasonable in the case of steroids (CAS 2016/A/4377, para. 52; CAS 2016/A/4563, para. 58, 63; CAS 2017/A/4962, para. 52, etc.), but can hardly be fully applied in the case of higenamine. |
Plant | Also Known As: |
---|---|
Nelumbo nucifera (lotus seeds) | Indian lotus, sacred lotus |
Nandina domestica (fruit) | Heavenly bamboo/sacred bamboo |
Aconitum carmichaelii (root) | Chinese aconite/Chinese wolfsbane |
Asarum heterotropoides | Snakeroot and wild ginger |
Galium divaricatum (stem and vine) | Lamarck’s bedstraw |
Annona squamosa | Sweetsops |
Three Hypotheses | Credibility of Hypothesis |
---|---|
| Hypothesis is not very convincing. The use of this type of supplement in football is not medically recommended, since it increases heart beats and blood pressure, which are also increased during the game, and thus can cause an overload of the player’s circulatory system. It is observed that Goiás is a football club with a good structure in terms of athlete nutrition. Athletes are instructed on what to eat before and after a training session. As for concentrations, menus are established for every day with a very small margin being left for accidental deviations. |
| Hypothesis is being verified using scientific measures. The WADA Scientific Department proposed collaborative work between the Rio de Janeiro and Cologne Laboratories to define once and for all the real possibilities of sweetsop juice to generate AAF. |
| The third hypothesis involves exclusion of the first two or a possible complementation of the second, which would be a metabolic alteration that would justify the adverse analytical result. The rapporteur considered this to be the weakest hypothesis. |
Traditional (Biochemically Oriented) Reasoning | |
General principle | Explication of the general principle |
The athlete must show how exactly the substance has entered his/her body. | It is the sine qua non or “cause-in-fact” requirement; unless established, the athlete fails to prove NSFN. Other attempts are called not evidence, but “mere speculations”, “protestations of innocence” (CAS 2018/A/5619), or—at best—“the narrowest of corridors” (CAS 2016/A/4534). |
Flexible (Socio-Legally Oriented) Reasoning | |
General principle | Explication of the general principle |
The athlete can present several scenarios or hypotheses and, by excluding the “intent-scenario”, (s)he can expect a lower sanction to be imposed. | The circumstance is proven by the “proximate” or “legal” cause requirement. This requirement is of a probabilistic nature rather than deterministic. To a certain extent, this requirement was followed in the cases of Guedes, Di Giorgio, and Ademi (CAS 2016/A/4676). |
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Zaksaite, S. Higenamine, Anti-Doping, and Plant-Based Cuisine: A Legal Analysis of Higenamine in Sport Anti-Doping Systems. Laws 2022, 11, 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060082
Zaksaite S. Higenamine, Anti-Doping, and Plant-Based Cuisine: A Legal Analysis of Higenamine in Sport Anti-Doping Systems. Laws. 2022; 11(6):82. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060082
Chicago/Turabian StyleZaksaite, Salomeja. 2022. "Higenamine, Anti-Doping, and Plant-Based Cuisine: A Legal Analysis of Higenamine in Sport Anti-Doping Systems" Laws 11, no. 6: 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060082
APA StyleZaksaite, S. (2022). Higenamine, Anti-Doping, and Plant-Based Cuisine: A Legal Analysis of Higenamine in Sport Anti-Doping Systems. Laws, 11(6), 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws11060082