OCB/NANBF/IFPA DRUG TESTING GUIDELINES
Drug testing screening methods used at Organization of Competitive Bodybuilders (OCB), North American Natural
Bodybuilding Federation (NANBF) and International Fitness & Physique Association (IFPA) events are a means to determine
eligibility. If competitors can not successfully pass any screening methods used, they will either not be allowed to compete if
determined prior to the event (Ex. Polygraph test), or will be disqualified and be removed from official results if determined
Competitors cannot have used any substances indicated as being banned for OCB/NANBF/IFPA competitions during the
All participants at each OCB, NANBF and IFPA show must submit to polygraph screening for use of banned substances
(polygraph test results from OCB or NANBF amateur shows can be honored for other OCB or NANBF amateur shows held within three weeks of each other). OCB and NANBF events that are designated as IFPA pro qualifiers conduct urinalysis
testing for Bodybuilding and Figure Open and Masters pro qualifying placements in addition. IFPA pro events conduct
urinalysis testing for cash prize winners in each category.
Competitors are responsible for ensuring they are tested at events. Polygraph examiners supply the OCB, NANBF and IFPA
home offices with lists of contestants tested after each show. Urinalysis results go directly to the OCB/NANBF/IFPA home offices. If it's discovered any participants who should have been polygraph tested were not, they will be disqualified and
removed from the official results. If any pro qualifying winners do not provide a urine sample at IFPA pro qualifiers, eligibility
to compete in the IFPA pro federation will be void. If any cash prize placement winners at IFPA pro shows do not provide a
urine sample at the event, they will be disqualified and removed from the official results
Forms of drug testing in addition to the required may be requested of select Bodybuilding, Figure, Fitness or Fitness Model at
any event at the promoter's discretion and expense. This could include urinalysis, voice stress, blood, saliva, hair testing or
Competitors are ultimately responsible for substances they take. If urine test results come back positive for any banned
substance, competitors are disqualified regardless of what may have been responsible for the positive result. IFPA athletes are subject to out of contest (spot) drug testing throughout the year. IFPA members are responsible for
keeping the IFPA up-to-date whenever changes to contact information occur.
BANNED SUBSTANCES Products that contain ingredients that have chemical names similar to anything on the banned substance list could potentially
cause a positive urine test result. Check with the NANBF/OCB/IFPA drug testing officials if uncertain as to whether a
particular product is disallowed or not.
Anabolic Agents:
Including, but not limited to the following as well as their metabolites:
Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date:
DHCMT (Dehydrochloromethyltestosterone)
Methandrostenolone (Methandienone, Dianabol)
Testosterone / (T/E Ratio > 6:1)
Cannot have been used after January 19, 2005¹ (or ineligible for 7 years from date of last use)
1-Testosterone (1-dihydrotestosterone), (1-Androstendiol) found in supplements such as 1-AD and 1-Androstendione
4-Hydroxytestosterone (Formestane)
Androstendione (Androstendiol), found in supplements such as 4-AD. (T/E Ratio > 6:1)
Methyl-1-testosterone, found in supplements such as M1T
Nandrolone (19-Norandrostendione), (19-Norandrostendiol)
¹ The Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 2004 went into effect January 20, 2005. The bill added a number of “prohormones” and
“prosteriods” to the list of illegal anabolic steroids previously established. The new additions became banned substances effective January 20, 2005. A complete list of banned substances included in the Act can be found online at
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c108:S.2195:
Cannot have been used after December 31, 2005² (or ineligible for 7 years from date of last use)
6a-Methylandrostendione (17-hydroxy-6-alpha methyl-ethyletiochalon-3,20 dione), found in supplements such as M1P
Desoxymethyltestosterone (DMT), (17a-methyl-etioallocholan-2-ene-17b-ol), (17-methyl-delta-2-etioallocholane
isomers), found in supplements such as Pheraplex, P-Plex, Phera Vol, Ergomax, Methyl-Plex, D-Stianozol, MASS
Estra-4,9-diene-3,17-dione / 19-norandrosta-4,9-diene-3,17-dione (found in supplements such as FiniGenX Magnum,
Methasterone (Methyldrostanolone), (Methasteron), (2a,17a di methyl etiocholan 3-one, 17b-ol), (2a,17a-dimethyl-
17b-hydroxy-5a-androstan-3-one), (2a, 17a-dimethyl-17b-hydroxy-5a-etiocholan-3-one), found in supplements such as Superdrol, S-Drol, Methyl Masterdrol, M-Drol, OmneVol, and Methyl-Drol XT
Prostanozol ([3,2-c]pyrazole-5alpha-etioallocholane-17beta-tetrahydropyranol), found in supplements such as
² Designer steroids that were/are being legally sold over-the-counter as supplements that became banned with the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) effective January 1, 2006 and subsequently became banned substances with OCB/NANBF/IFPA
Cannot be used after December 31, 2008 (or ineligible for 2 years from date of last use)
Liothyronine sodium (L-triiodothyronine), (T3), found in brand names such as Cytomel
1,4,6-Androstatrien-3,17-dione (ATD), found in supplements such as Rebound XT, Novedex XT, Reversitol, Arimatest,
DecaVol, Formadrol Extreme XL, Methyl 1-D, Methyl 1-D XL and Inhibit-E)
1,4-androstadiene-3,17-dione (1,4 AD), (Boldione), found in supplements such as Bold and MMA-3 Xtreme
M-1,4ADD (17a-methyl-1,4-Androstadiene-3,17diol), found in supplements such as Methyl-Stak
2,3a-Epithio-17a-methyletioallo cholan-17b-ol (2a,3a-epithio-17a-methyletioallocholanol), (2a, 3a-Epithio-17a-Methyl-
5a-Androstan-17b-Ol), found in supplements such as E-Stane, EPI, Epistane, Epidrol, Epivol, Methly E, Epi-Max,
4-chloro-17a-methyl-andro-4-ene-3,17b-diol (4-chloro-17a-methyl-androst-1,4-diene-3-17b-diol), (17a-methyl-4-
chloro-androsta-1,4-diene-3b,17b-diol), (4-chloro-17a-methyl-4-ene-3,17 diol), found in supplements such as
ProMagnon 25, H-Drol, Super Halo, VNS-9 Xtreme, Halotest 25 and Halodrol-50
Cannot be used after December 31, 2009 (or ineligible for 2 years from date of last use)
12-ethyl-3-methoxy-gona-diene (6-17 dihydroxyetiocholone-3-ol propionate), found in supplements such as Propadrol
13-ethyl-3-methoxy-gona-2,5(10)-diene-17-one, found in supplements such as Max LMG, Revolt, Nasty Mass and
17b-Methoxy-Trienbolone, found in supplements such as Methoxy-TRN and Trenadrol
4-chloro-17a-methyl-etioallochol-4-ene-17b-ol-3, 11-dione, found in supplements such as Oxanabolan* and Oxyguno
*After an inquiry from OCB, Victor Uralets, Ph.D., head of sports drug testing at Redwood Toxicology Laboratory purchased a bottle of Oxanabolon capsules from Bodybuilding Chemicals, Inc., tested it, and said it appears to be desoxymethyltestosterone, not 4-chloro-17a-methyl-etioallochol-4-ene-17b-ol-3,11-dione as listed on the label. Desoxymethyltestosterone (DMT, 17a-methyl-etioallocholan-2-ene-17b-ol), (found in supplements such as Pheraplex, P-Plex, Phera Vol, Ergomax, Methyl-Plex, D-Stianozol and Nasty Mass InSLINsified), has been banned with NANBF/OCB/IFPA since January 1, 2006. Thus, this should not be used effective immediately.
5a-androstana[2,3-c] furazan-17b-tetrahydropyranol (found in supplements such as Furaguno and Ortasan-A)
Androst-4-ene-3,6,17-trione (4-Androstene-3,6,17-trione), (4-etioallocholen-3,6,17-trione), (4 –AT), found in
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA, 3-beta-Hydroxy-5-androsten-17-one, 3-beta-Hydroxyandrost-5-en-17-one, 3-beta-
Hydroxy-D5-androsten-17-one, 3-beta-hydroxy-etioallocholan-5-ene-17-one, 5-Androsten-3beta-ol-17-one, Prastera,
Prasterone, Fidelin, Fluasterone) in excess of 50 mg/day*
*DHEA is a naturally occurring steroid hormone produced in the adrenal glands by both men and women. Production of it decreases with age. DHEA is not recommended for people under 40 years of age, unless DHEA levels are known to be low (<130 mg/dl in women and <180 mg/dl in men). Therapeutic doses of 10-50mg of DHEA are used by many mature individuals (age 40+) for increase in perceived physical and psychological well-being (improved quality of sleep, more relaxed, increased energy, better ability to handle stress, improved depressive state)1. For men or women who have either adrenal insufficiency or hypopituitarism, although gluco- and mineralocorticosteroid replacement is needed, 50 mg a day of DHEA is sufficient for replacement2. Studies have shown no dangerous side effects from DHEA supplementation when taken in normal recommended therapeutic doses3. With respect to potential increase of the urinary testosterone/epitestosterone ratio (T/E) through DHEA supplementation, studies support DHEA use of 50mg/day or less having only slightly affected levels for a short period of time (2–5 h) without exceeding the 6:1 current acceptable ratio for OCB, NANBF and the IFPA4. DHEA’s effectiveness as an anabolic or energy-producing agent remains unproven.
Dymethazine, Mebalozine (17beta-hydroxy 2alpha,17beta-dimethyl 5alpha-androstan 3-on azine) found in
Levothyroxine (L-thyroxine, T4), (found in brand names such as Levothroid, Levoxyl, Synthroid, Unithroid)
1 A.J. Morales, S.S.C. Yen 1994, C. Berr and E.E. Baulieu 1996, F. Labrie, P. Diamond 1997, M. Bloch 1999 ² Young J, Couzinet B, Nahoul K 1997, Arlt W, Justl H-G, Callies F 1998 ³ van Vollenhoven RF, Morabito LM, Engleman EG, et al. Treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus with dehydroepiandrosterone: 50 patients treated up to 12
months. J Rheumatol. 1998;25:285-289. Khalsa, M.D., Dharma Singh with Cameron Stauth, Brain Longevity (New York: Warner Books, 1997), pages 401-402. ISBN: 0-446-52067-5
4 Bosy TZ, Moore KA, Poklis A. The effect of oral dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) on the urine testosterone/epitestosterone (T/E) ratio in human male volunteers.
5 Wallace, M. B.; Lim, J.; Cutler, A.; Bucci, L. (1999). "Effects of dehydroepiandrosterone vs androstenedione supplementation in men". Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 31 (12): 1788–92. PMID 10613429. Corrigan AB. Dehydroepiandrosterone and sport. Med J Aust. 1999;171:206-208. Welle S, Jozefowicz R,
Statt M. Failure of dehydroepiandrosterone to influence energy and protein metabolism in humans. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1990; 71: 1259-1264.
Note: A T/E ratio >6:1 is deemed a violation of anti doping rules regardless of what compound is ingested. Any supplements
Growth Hormones (Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date) including, but not limited to:
Human Chorionic Gonadrotropin (HCG)
Pharmaceutical Human Growth Hormone (HGH)
Prescription Antiestrogens (Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date) including, but not limited Stimulants (Cannot have been used within six months of contest date):
Prescription weight-loss substances used for bodybuilding purposes including, but not limited to the following as well as their
MDE (Methylenedioxyethylamphetamine)
MDMA (Methylenedioxymethanphetamine)
Cannot have been used after September 1, 2007 (or ineligible for 6 months from date of last use) Masking Agents (Cannot have been used after December 31, 2002) (or ineligible for 7 years from date of last use)
Chemicals or drugs used for the purpose of deceiving or passing the polygraph test and anything used to attempt altering urine test results including, but not limited to:
Prescription Diuretics (cannot have been used within 3 weeks before contest date) including, but not limited to: Miscellaneous:
Insulin for the purpose of bodybuilding (Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date)
Synthol (Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date)
For the purpose of physique competition, any medical procedures that extract fat and can show more leanness
Any of substances on this banned list found in alternative forms available through “experimental” or “for research
purposes only” labeling (Cannot have been used within seven years of contest date)
Answers to FAQ:
7-oxo-DHEA (also known as 7-keto-DHEA), 7alpha-hydroxy-DHEA (7alpha-OH-DHEA), and 7beta-hydroxy-DHEA
(7beta-OH-DHEA) - DHEA metabolites that do not convert to androgens or estrogens or interact with sex steroid
receptors - are not banned substances with OCB/NANBF/IFPA
Natural diuretics (ex. Dandelion root) legally sold over-the-counter are not banned with OCB/NANBF/IFPA
Athletes, like all others, may have illnesses or conditions that require them to take particular medications. If the
medication an athlete is required to take to treat an illness or condition happens to fall under the prohibited list, a
therapeutic use exemption may give that athlete the authorization to take the needed medicine. Criteria for granting a
therapeutic use exemption are 1.) The athlete would experience significant health problems without taking the
prohibited substance or method, 2.) The therapeutic use of the substance would not produce significant enhancement
of performance, and 3.) There is no reasonable therapeutic alternative to the use of the otherwise prohibited substance or method
Questions concerning drug testing can be emailed the OCB/NANBF/IFPA doping officials at drug.testing@ IFPA.us.
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