I know Kurt is correct.  A friend of mine headed the project team at
Amgen which initially developed EPO sometime around 1985.  He is now
very wealthy.  Coincidently he was also a semi-professional cyclist.


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Kurt Bray
Sent: Tuesday, March 05, 2002 5:34 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Olympic DQ's


>It is supposedly made to address anemia in Kidney dialysis patients
rather
>than cancer patients.  How anemia, and stimulating the production of
RBC's,
>in each case differs is beyond me right now.

The new stuff (Darbepoetin) is a slight modification of good old EPO.
It 
has the same protein backbone as EPO but with modified sugars attached
to it 
- designed to increase its "hang time" in the blood so that it doesn't
have 
to be given so often.

It seems to me that this modification would make it much easier to test
for, 
as those skiers in Salt Lake City found out to their regret, because it
is 
no longer identical to the natural endogenous substance.  This "same as 
natural" characteristic, while wonderful for clinical uses, has hampered
the 
development of effective tests that can distinguish the EPO your kidneys

made from the EPO you bought at the gym.

Both drugs are approved to treat dialysis anemia, and Darbepoetin is
also 
approved for cancer treatment induced anemia, although EPO has also been

used "off label" for that for a long time.

>local newspaper.  It stated in no uncertain terms that Amgen had fully
>developed EPO "by 1983".  It made no mention of when it was available
as a
>prescription drug

This is an error by your newspaper (error in a newspaper?  Shocking!).
EPO 
could not possibly have been fully developed by 1983 nor even could it
even 
have been available "underground" back then, because the gene from which
all 
this recombinant EPO is made was not discovered until 1985.  It's all 
documented in the scientific literature if you care to look.

EPO did not become widely available in the US until it was approved by
the 
FDA which was on June 1st, 1989.  Between 1985 and 1989 there was only
stuff 
available for clinical trials and whatever might have been stolen out of

labs for dishonorable purposes.

Kurt Bray

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