Biological Passport

The Biological Passport – internationally known as the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) – is considered one of the most important innovations in the fight against doping since the major scandals of the 1990s and early 2000s. Instead of searching exclusively for prohibited substances in a single sample, the system documents long-term changes in the body's own markers. In cycling, which has historically been particularly shaped by doping scandals, the Biological Passport has become a central pillar of integrity protection.

What is the Biological Passport?

The Biological Passport is an individual long-term profile of an athlete, built from repeated blood and urine samples. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) defines the technical and legal framework in the WADA Code. The UCI implements the system mandatorily for all licensed professional cyclists.

Basic Principle: Profile Instead of Single Test

Classic doping tests ask: "Is a prohibited substance detectable in the sample?" The Biological Passport asks a different question: "Does the athlete's current biological profile deviate from their individual normal state or from physiologically plausible limits?"

This paradigm shift is particularly relevant for methods such as Blood Manipulation or micro-dosing of EPO Doping, which are difficult or impossible to detect in single samples but alter the blood profile over weeks and months.

Important: A negative single test does not rule out doping – however, a suspicious Biological Passport can trigger targeted follow-up controls, even if the original substance has long since been metabolized.

Modules of the Athlete Biological Passport

The WADA Biological Passport consists of two main modules that can be evaluated independently of each other:

Hematological Module

The hematological module monitors markers of the red blood cell profile. It primarily targets EPO doping, autologous and homologous blood transfusions.

Key parameters:

  1. Hemoglobin (Hb) – oxygen transport capacity of the blood
  2. Hematocrit (Hct) – proportion of red blood cells in total blood volume
  3. Reticulocyte percentage (RET%) – proportion of young, mature red blood cells
  4. OFF-Score – mathematically derived value from Hb and Reticulocyte Values

Steroid Module

The steroid module analyzes hormone and steroid profiles in urine. It serves to detect artificial testosterone administration and manipulated steroid metabolism patterns.

Typical analysis points:

  • Testosterone and epitestosterone (T/E Ratio)
  • Long-term metabolites of anabolic steroids
  • Isotope ratios to distinguish endogenous vs. synthetic
  • Phase profile across multiple samples
Module
Sample Material
Main Objective
Typical Doping Method
Introduction (approx.)
Hematological
Blood (venous)
Blood manipulation
EPO, blood transfusion
2009 (UCI)
Steroidal
Urine
Anabolic abuse
Testosterone, stanozolol
2014 (WADA mandatory)
Endocrine (optional)
Blood/Urine
Hormone doping
Growth hormone, IGF-1
Research/Expansion

Historical Development in Cycling

Cycling was a pioneer in the comprehensive introduction of the Biological Passport – not least because the Festina affair, Operation Puerto, and the USADA report had shaken confidence in classic controls.

Milestones from 2007 to 2025

2007
UCI pilot project with selected teams
2008
WADA publishes ABP guidelines
2009
Mandatory for all UCI WorldTour teams
2011
First bans based on suspicious profiles
2014
Steroid module mandatory WADA-wide
2019
Extended Whereabouts System integration
2023/2024
Tightened evaluation algorithms and unannounced blood tests

Why Cycling in Particular?

Several factors made the Biological Passport indispensable in cycling:

  • High endurance load favors measurable blood parameter fluctuations during manipulation
  • Systematic doping in teams of the 1990s/2000s required long-term monitoring
  • Media and sponsor pressure following repeated scandals
  • UCI as global rule maker was able to enforce comprehensive introduction

How It Works in Detail

Blood and Urine Samples and Database

Every relevant doping control provides data for the Biological Passport. Samples are analyzed in WADA-accredited laboratories; results flow into the ADAMS system (Anti-Doping Administration and Management System).

Building a Biological Passport – 6 Steps:

  1. Unannounced control
  2. Sample collection (blood/urine)
  3. Laboratory analysis
  4. Upload to ADAMS
  5. Statistical evaluation (ABP software)
  6. Classification: normal / atypical / suspicious

Statistical Evaluation

The ABP software compares each new measurement with:

  • the athlete's individual reference profile (own historical values)
  • population-based thresholds (comparison with reference population)
  • physiological models for expected fluctuations (altitude training, illness, competition load)

Classification of Findings

Finding Category
Meaning
Consequence
Example in Cycling
Normal
Values within expected range
No further measures
Regular season progression
Atypical (ATU)
Unusual profile, no doping assumption
Closer monitoring controls
Post-altitude training camp
Suspicious (ABP)
High probability of manipulation
Disciplinary Risk possible
Suspicion of blood doping
Positive Test
Substance directly detected
Ban under WADA Code
EPO detection in urine/blood

Practical Examples and Impact

Successful Detections

Since its introduction, several professionals have been banned or sentenced to bans based on suspicious Biological Passports – often independent of a positive single test. Known cases involved riders from WorldTour and ProTeams; the exact profiles are partly subject to confidentiality, but the impact on the peloton was noticeable.

Typical patterns in blood doping:

  • Increase in hemoglobin/hematocrit without plausible training context
  • Reticulocyte patterns indicating recent blood manipulation
  • Deviations from individual baseline profile after vacation periods

Deterrent Effect

Studies and UCI reports suggest that the Biological Passport has lowered the average hematocrit level in the professional peloton. Riders know: every blood sample counts toward the long-term file – micro-dosing becomes riskier because patterns accumulate over months.

Statistics: WorldTour Control Density

On average 20–30 anti-doping tests per top athlete per season, with a significant proportion including blood collection for the Biological Passport. Trend since 2019: significant increase in unannounced out-of-competition tests.

Legal and Ethical Aspects

Burden of Proof and Athletes' Rights

A suspicious Biological Passport is not an automatic doping verdict. Athletes have the right to:

  • A hearing and submission of medical explanations
  • B-sample analysis in case of substance detection
  • Appeal before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS)

Nevertheless, in ABP practice a statistically substantiated suspicious profile is sufficient for disciplinary proceedings – a controversial but intentional legal principle.

Medical Explanations

Athletes can explain suspicious values with medical reasons:

  • Altitude training camps (legal, but profile-relevant)
  • Dehydration or infections
  • Kidney or bone marrow diseases (rare)
  • Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUE) for certain medications

Missing or implausible medical documentation for suspicious profiles generally leads to confirmation of the violation – "altitude training" alone is not sufficient as a blanket explanation.

Limitations and Points of Criticism

The Biological Passport is not a panacea. Critics and scientists cite the following limitations:

  1. Micro-dosing – extremely small EPO doses can remain below the detection threshold
  2. Costs and logistics – blood samples require accredited laboratories and a fast cold chain
  3. Individual variability – some athletes have naturally unusual values
  4. Time delay – profiles need multiple samples over months for reliable conclusions
  5. New substances – substances without influence on monitored markers evade the system

Tip: The combination of Biological Passport, storage of blood samples for later re-tests, and whistleblower programs is considered the currently most effective anti-doping strategy in cycling.

Integration into the UCI Anti-Doping Program

The UCI interlinks the Biological Passport with further measures:

  • No-Needle Policy – injections without medical indication prohibited
  • Rest period rule – rest periods and hotel checks during Grand Tours
  • Team responsibility – teams are also liable for doping violations by their riders
  • Financial Incentives – bonuses for clean teams (historically variable)

Comparison of Anti-Doping Instruments

Instrument
Detection Period
Costs
Deterrence
Evidential Strength
Classic Single Test
Acute (hours to days)
Medium
Medium
High with direct substance detection
Biological Passport
Long-term (months)
High
High
High with profile deviation
Whereabouts System (ADAMS)
Permanent availability
Low
High
Indirect (enables tests)
Whistleblower Hotline
Variable
Low
Medium
Depends on tip quality

Checklist: What Professionals Need to Know About the Biological Passport

  • ✓ Every blood and urine sample flows into the long-term file – even "negative" tests count
  • ✓ Whereabouts in the ADAMS system must be complete and up to date
  • ✓ Altitude training and illnesses should be medically documented
  • ✓ Suspicious profiles can lead to bans – even without a positive single test
  • ✓ B-sample right applies with direct substance detection
  • ✓ TUE applications must be approved before taking prohibited substances (exceptions)
  • ✓ Dietary supplements carry contamination risk – caution with uncertified products

Future of the Biological Passport

The further development of the system remains dynamic:

Technological Trends

  1. Artificial intelligence in pattern recognition for subtler deviations
  2. Extended markers – e.g. gene expression analyses (research)
  3. Dried Blood Spot (DBS) – simplified sample collection, faster logistics
  4. Long-term storage – re-analysis of old samples with new methods

Significance for Restoring Trust

For fans, sponsors, and young riders, the Biological Passport is a visible signal: the sport invests in long-term integrity rather than just spot checks. Whether public trust has been fully restored remains controversial – technically, however, the ABP is considered a milestone. More on this at Restoring Trust in Cycling.

Frequently Asked Questions About the Biological Passport

Can I as an amateur also have a Biological Passport?

UCI license holders from certain classes, otherwise national programs.

How often is blood taken?

Variable, top professionals multiple times per month during the season.

Is altitude training sufficient as an explanation?

Only with plausible documentation and temporal context.

What happens with ATU vs. ABP?

ATU = closer testing, ABP = disciplinary proceedings possible.

Are old samples re-tested?

Yes, with new analysis methods stored samples can be re-analyzed.

Conclusion

The Biological Passport has shifted the fight against doping in cycling from spot substance detection to long-term monitoring of the body. It is not a perfect solution, but in combination with unannounced controls, the WADA Code, and targeted investigations it is the strongest instrument against blood doping and systematic manipulation. For every professional cyclist, understanding one's own biological profile logic is no longer optional, but a professional obligation.