Several containe lead, arsenic and cadmium and these substances are known to cause cancer, heart disease and organ failure.
Eighteen-year-old
Mark scrolls Instagram late at night, watching videos of fitness influencers
showing off muscle gains and lifting the equivalent of a baby elephant off the
gym floor.
Spurred on by hashtags
and usernames indicating these feats involve steroids, soon Mark is online,
ordering his first “steroid cycle”. No script, no warnings, just vials in the
mail and the promise of “gains”.
A few weeks later,
he's posting progress shots and getting tagged as #MegaMark. He's pleased. But
what if I told you Mark was unknowingly injecting toxic chemicals?
In our new research
we tested products sold in Australia's underground steroid market and found
many were mislabelled or missing the expected steroid entirely.
Even more concerning,
several contained heavy metals such as lead, arsenic and cadmium. These
substances are known to cause cancer, heart disease and organ failure.
What are anabolic
steroids, and who is using them?
Anabolic steroids are
synthetic drugs designed to mimic the effects of testosterone. Medical
professionals sometimes prescribe them for specific health conditions (for
example, hypogonadism, where the body isn't making enough sex hormones). But
they are more commonly taken by people looking to increase muscle size, improve
athletic performance, or elevate feelings of wellbeing.
In Australia, it's
illegal to possess steroids without a prescription. This offence can attract
large fines and prison terms (up to 25 years in Queensland).
Despite this, they're
widely available online and from your local “gym bro”. So it's not surprising
we're seeing escalating use, particularly among young men and women.
People usually take
steroids as pills and capsules or injectable oil- or water-based products. But
while many people assume these products are safe if used correctly, they're
made outside regulated settings, with no official quality checks.
Our research
For this new study,
we analysed 28 steroid products acquired from people all over Australia which
they'd purchased either online or from peers in the gym. These included 16
injectable oils, ten varieties of oral tablets, and two “raw” powders.
An independent
forensic lab tested the samples for active ingredients, contaminants and heavy
metals. We then compared the results against what people thought they were
taking.
More than half of the
samples were mislabelled or contained the wrong drug. For example, one product
labelled as testosterone enanthate (200mg/mL) contained 159mg/mL of trenbolone
(a potent type of steroid) and no detectable testosterone. Oxandrolone (also
known as “Anavar”, another type of steroid) tablets were sold claiming a
strength of 10mg but actually contained 6.8mg, showing a disparity in purity.
Just four products
matched their expected compound and purity within a 5% margin.
But the biggest
concern was that all steroids we analysed were contaminated with some level of
heavy metals, including lead, arsenic and cadmium.
While all of the
concentrations we detected were within daily exposure limits regarded as safe
by health authorities, more frequent and heavier use of these drugs would
quickly see people who use steroids exceed safe thresholds. And we know this
happens.
If consumed above
safe limits, research suggests lead can damage the brain and heart. Arsenic is
a proven carcinogen, having been linked to the development of skin, liver and
lung cancers.
People who use
steroids often dose for weeks or months, and sometimes stack multiple drugs, so
these metals would build up. This means long-term steroid use could be quietly
fuelling cognitive decline, organ failure, and even cancer.
What needs to happen
next?
Heavy metals such as
lead, arsenic and cadmium often contaminate anabolic steroid products because raw
powders sourced from some manufacturers, particularly those in China, may be
produced with poor quality control and impure starting materials. These metals
can enter the supply chain during synthesis, handling, or from contaminated
equipment and solvents, leading to their presence in the final products.
Steroid use isn't
going away, so we need to address the potential health harms from these
contaminants.
While pill testing is
now common at festivals for drugs such as ecstasy, testing anabolic steroids requires
more complex chemical analysis that cannot be conducted on-site. Current
steroid testing relies on advanced laboratory techniques, which limits
availability mostly to specialised research programs such as those in Australia
and Switzerland.
We need to invest
properly in a national steroid surveillance and testing network, which will
give us data-driven insights to inform targeted interventions.
This should involve
nationwide steroid testing programs integrated with needle-and-syringe
programmes and community health services which steroid-using communities are
aware of and engage with.
We also need to see peer-led support through trusted programs to educate people who use steroids around the risks. The programs should be based in real evidence, and developed by people with lived experience of steroid use, in partnership with researchers and clinicians.
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