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Ipamorelin

NNC 26-0161, Aib-His-D-2-Nal-D-Phe-Lys-NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 17
Trials 2
Score 2
2016 pubmed 9 citations

Doping control container for urine stabilization: a pilot study.

Tsivou. Maria M; Giannadaki. Evangelia E; Hooghe. Fiona F; Roels. Kris K; Van Gansbeke. Wim W; Garribba. Flaminia F; Lyris. Emmanouil E; Deventer. Koen K; Mazzarino. Monica M; Donati. Francesco F; Georgakopoulos. Dimitrios G DG; Van Eenoo. Peter P; Georgakopoulos. Costas G CG; de la Torre. Xavier X; Botrè. Francesco F

Key Findings

  • Spray‑coated containers stop microbial growth and protease activity in urine samples
  • The chemical mix preserves small peptides such as ipamorelin during incubation
  • Routine doping screens showed no significant analytical interference from the stabilizer

Practical Outcomes

  • If you plan to collect and store urine for later testing of ipamorelin or other peptides, use a container pre‑treated with the described chemical stabilizer to prevent degradation. This improves the reliability of detection but does not change how you dose or use the peptide.

Summary

The paper describes a spray‑coated urine collection container that contains antimicrobial agents and protease inhibitors, which keeps urine from breaking down due to microbes or enzymes. It was shown to protect small peptides like ipamorelin, as well as larger proteins, during storage, making doping tests more reliable. For DIY testers, it means you need a stabilized container if you want accurate urine analysis of peptides.

Abstract

Urine collection containers used in the doping control collection procedure do not provide a protective environment for urine, against degradation by microorganisms and proteolytic enzymes. An in-house chemical stabilization mixture was developed to tackle urine degradation problems encountered in human sport samples, in cases of microbial contamination or proteolytic activity. The mixture consists of antimicrobial substances and protease inhibitors for the simultaneous inactivation of a wide range of proteolytic enzymes. It has already been tested in lab-scale, as part of World Anti-Doping Agency's (WADA) funded research project, in terms of efficiency against microbial and proteolytic activity. The present work, funded also by WADA, is a follow-up study on the improvement of chemical stabilization mixture composition, application mode and limitation of interferences, using pilot urine collection containers, spray-coated in their internal surface with the chemical stabilization mixture. Urine in plastic stabilized collection containers have been gone through various incubation cycles to test for stabilization efficiency and analytical matrix interferences by three WADA accredited Laboratories (Athens, Ghent, and Rome). The spray-coated chemical stabilization mixture was tested against microorganism elimination and steroid glucuronide degradation, as well as enzymatic breakdown of proteins, such as intact hCG, recombinant erythropoietin and small peptides (GHRPs, ipamorelin), induced by proteolytic enzymes. Potential analytical interferences, observed in the presence of spray-coated chemical stabilization mixture, were recorded using routine screening procedures. The results of the current study support the application of the spray-coated plastic urine container, in the doping control collection procedure. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-09-21T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/dta.2048

Citations

9

References

22