Health Care
Updated: Wednesday, 29 Jul 2009, 5:50 PM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 29 Jul 2009, 5:25 PM EDT
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public health advisory warning consumers to stop using any body building products that are represented to contain steroids or steroid-like substances.
Many of these products are marketed as dietary supplements.
This advisory was issued along with a warning letter sent to American Cellular Laboratories Inc. for marketing and distributing body building products containing synthetic steroid substances. Although these products are marketed as dietary supplements, they are NOT dietary supplements, but instead are unapproved and misbranded drugs.
Below are a list of questions and answers posted on the FDA's website:
Q. What types of products are affected by this public health
advisory?
A. FDA is warning consumers about products that are being
marketed for body building and that claim to contain steroids or
steroid-like substances. These products are sold online and in
retail stores and are promoted as hormone products and/or as
alternatives to anabolic steroids for increasing muscle mass and
strength. Many of these products are labeled as dietary supplements
and make claims about the ability of the active ingredients to
enhance or diminish androgen, estrogen, or progestin-like effects
in the body. Consumers should be aware that these products are
potentially harmful and that FDA has not approved them nor reviewed
their safety before marketing.
Q. What are some examples of these types of products?
A. These body building products are often marketed as being
anabolic (promoting muscle building) and/or being similar to
anabolic steroids (such as testosterone). The products included in
the warning letter to American Cellular Laboratories Inc. provide a
few examples of the body building products about which FDA has
safety concerns. The product names and ingredients listed in the
warning letter are:
TREN-Xtreme: 19-Norandrosta-4,9-diene-3,17 dione, marketed as
“similar to Trenbolone”
MASS Xtreme: 17α-methyl-etioallocholan-2-ene-17b-ol,
marketed as “similar to Methyl Testosterone”
ESTRO Xtreme: 4-hydroxyandrostenedione (4-OHA)
AH-89-Xtreme:
5α-androstano[3,2-c]pyrazole-3-one-17β-ol-THP-ether,
marketed as “similar to Stanozolol”
HMG Xtreme:
2α,3α-epithio-17α-methyl-17β-hydroxy-5α-etioallocholane
MMA-3 Xtreme: Androsta-1,4-dien-3,17-dione, marketed as
“similar to Boldenone (Equipoise)”
VNS-9 Xtreme:
17α-methyl-4-chloro-androsta-1,4-diene-3β,17β-diol,
marketed as “similar to Turinabol”
TT-40-Xtreme: 1-androsterone, marketed as “very similar
to 1-Testosterone” and “converts to
1-Testosterone”
Q. What are the health risks of these types of products?
A. Adverse event reports received by FDA for body building
products that are labeled to contain steroids or steroid
alternatives involve men (ages 22-55) and include cases of serious
liver injury, stroke, kidney failure and pulmonary embolism
(blockage of an artery in the lung). Acute liver injury is known to
be a possible harmful effect of using anabolic steroid-containing
products. In addition, anabolic steroids may cause other serious
long-term adverse health consequences in men, women, and children.
These include shrinkage of the testes and male infertility,
masculinization of women, breast enlargement in males, short
stature in children, adverse effects on blood lipid levels, and
increased risk of heart attack and stroke.
Q. Why does FDA say these products are illegally marketed?
A. These products are NOT dietary supplements because they
contain synthetic steroid or steroid-like active ingredients. These
products are unapproved new drugs because they are not generally
recognized as safe and effective. In fact, they are potentially
harmful. In addition, the products are misbranded because the
labeling is misleading and does not provide adequate directions for
use.
Q. What action is FDA taking?
A. FDA has issued a public health advisory to highlight the
risks of products that are marketed for body building and that
contain or claim to contain steroids or steroid-like substances.
The agency has executed a search warrant and issued a warning
letter to American Cellular Laboratories Inc., which markets a
number of these products, because the products are unapproved new
drugs and are misbranded. FDA is gathering and reviewing additional
data about other products that are marketed for body building and
that claim to contain steroids or steroid-like substances.
Q. What should consumers do if they have been using these
products?
A. Due to the potential serious health risks, FDA recommends
that consumers immediately stop using these products. Consumers
should also consult their health care professional if they are
experiencing symptoms possibly associated with these products,
particularly nausea, weakness or fatigue, fever, abdominal pain,
chest pain, shortness of breath, yellowing of the skin or whites of
the eyes, or brown/discolored urine. FDA also recommends that
consumers talk with their health care professional about body
building supplements they are taking, particularly if they are
uncertain about the product’s ingredients.
These products are often promoted to athletes to improve sports performance and to aid in recovery from training and sporting events. FDA cautions that athletes taking these products may test positive for performance-enhancing drugs.
Q. How should consumers report problems to FDA?
A. Report serious side effects or product quality problems
with the use of these products to FDA's MedWatch Adverse Event
Reporting program online, by regular mail, fax, or phone.
Regular Mail: Use FDA postage paid form 3500 and mail to
MedWatch, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852-9787
Fax: 800-FDA-0178
Phone: 800-FDA-1088