The
rules, modeled in part after proposals by The Jockey Club and the Racing
Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC), would set uniform testing thresholds
and restricted administration times for 17 commonly used therapeutic
medications deemed normal and appropriate for equine care.
In
addition, seven other medications are under consideration for inclusion on a
schedule of “Special Instance” therapeutic substances used in emergency,
infectious disease, or acute injury related situations. Use of these
medications would require disclosure and increased pre-race veterinary
scrutiny.
“Adoption
of the RCI Model Medication Rules and corresponding schedules will provide a
level of uniformity professional horse racing has long needed,” said Duncan
Patterson, current RCI Chair and Chairman of the Delaware Thoroughbred Racing
Commission. “These reforms are designed to protect our horses while being fair
to fans and participants alike. In all my years in racing, I have never seen this
level of unity of purpose.”
Patterson
said that “medications not included on an approved schedule of controlled
substances would be treated as prohibited and subject to harsher penalties
should they be found in a post-race sample”.
RCI
President Ed Martin noted that the association would be setting “Restricted
Administration” times instead of issuing recommended withdrawal times. “If a
substance on the schedule is given within the restricted administration time it
will be a violation in the same way as if the threshold had been exceeded,” he
said, noting that there would be a clear line that should not be crossed.
Martin
said that regulators are being encouraged to adopt the RCI Model Medication
Rules by “reference”, a tactic that will ensure that jurisdictions operate from
the same standards and rules. He said many regulators have expressed interest
in deferring to the RCI standards.
Martin
also said that changes to the RCI Penalty Guidelines are on the table. The RCI
Standardbred Racing Committee has proposed a minimum ten-year suspension and
$50,000 fine for blood doping and other egregious violations. Martin said he
believed the regulators are also interested in more stringent penalties for all
“prohibited substances” and are considering ways to implement progressive
sanctions on repeat offenders.
One
proposal discussed today would keep penalties the same for all overages
associated with substances included on the “Controlled Therapeutic Substance”
schedules while increasing them for all other substances considered
“prohibited”.
RCI
is not expected to modify its penalty guidelines prior to meeting in New
Orleans, Louisiana on April 23-25, 2013. A working group proposal which would
dramatically increase penalties for overages involving “prohibited substances”
is being circulated to the industry for comment and those comments will be
reviewed and considered at the New Orleans meeting.
The
medications that have been deemed by the RCI as “Controlled Therapeutic
Substances” as well as the restricted administration times are:
Betamethasone
|
7 days
|
IA administration of 9 mg of Betamethasone Sodium Phosphate
and Betamethasone Acetate Injectable Suspension, USP (American Regent product
#0517-0720-01)
|
Clenbuterol
|
14 Days
|
Oral administration of clenbuterol as Ventipulmin® syrup
(Boehringer-Ingelheim Vetmedica Inc., NADA 140-973) at 0.8 mcg/kg twice a day
|
Dantrolene
|
48 hours
|
Oral administration of 500 mg of dantrolene as paste
(compounding pharmacy) or capsule formulation (Proctor and Gamble)
|
Dexamethasone
|
72 hours
|
IA,
IM, and IV administration of dexamethasone sodium phosphate or oral
administration of dexamethasone at 0.05 mg/kg
|
Diclofenac
|
48 hours
|
Topical
application of 1% diclofenac liposomal cream formulation as (Surpass Topical
Anti- Inflammatory Cream, IDEXX Pharmaceuticals)
|
DMSO
|
48 hours
|
|
Firocoxib
|
14 days
|
Oral
administration of firocoxib as EQUIOXX oral paste at a daily dose of 0.1
mg/kg for four days
|
Flunixin
|
24 hours
|
Single
IV dose of flunixin as Banamine® (flunixin meglumine) at 1.1 mg/kg
|
Furosemide
|
4 hours
|
Single
IV dose of furosemide up to 500 mg
|
Glycopyrrolate
|
48 hours
|
Single
IV dose of 1 mg of glycopyrrolate as Glycopyrrolate Injection, USP (American
Regent product # 0517-4601-25).
|
Ketoprofen
|
24 hours
|
Single
IV dose of ketoprofen as Ketofen® () at 2.2 mg/kg
|
Methocarbamol
|
48 hours
|
Single IV dose of 0.15 mg/kg methocarbamol as Robaxin®
or multiple oral dose as
|
Methylprednisolone
|
|
Total
dose of Methylprednisolone acetate suspension in one articular space.
(Awaiting final action)
|
Omeprazole
|
24 hours
|
Single
oral dose of omeprazole as Gastrogard®
|
Phenylbutazone
|
24 hours
|
Single
IV dose of phenylbutazone
|
Prednisolone
|
|
Prednisolone
sodium succinate injection. (Awaiting final action and RMTC recommendation.)
|
Triamcinolone acetonide
|
7
days
|
Total does of 9mg in one articular space. Awaiting final
action.
|
The
medications being discussed for inclusion as “Special Instance Controlled
Therapeutic” are: Acepromazine, Butorphanol, Detomidine, Lidocaine,
Mepivacaine, Procaine penicillin, and Xylazine.
RCI
is expected to also create a process by which the AAEP, the RMTC, or the RCI
Regulatory Veterinarians Committee can petition to make changes or additions to
the schedules based upon equine welfare concerns or pharmacological
developments.