Supplements: Contamination and Third-Party Testing

Category: safety Updated: 2026-04-03

Geyer 2004 (PMID 15254749): 14.8% of 634 non-hormonal supplements contained undeclared anabolic steroids. USADA estimates ~25% of positive doping tests in sport involve contaminated supplements.

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
Evidence Tier1tierStrong — contamination is well-documented in analytical chemistry studies
Contamination Rate (non-hormonal supps)14.8%634 supplements; undeclared steroids/prohormones; Geyer 2004 PMID 15254749
Doping Cases from Contamination~25%USADA estimate; athletes bear full responsibility regardless of cause
Weight-Loss Product Risk~25% contamination rateHighest risk category; stimulants (ephedrine, DMAA) common contaminants
Pre-Workout Risk~20% contamination rateStimulant contamination most common; methylhexaneamine a known adulterant
Protein Powder Risk~15% contamination rateIncludes anabolic steroids, prohormones; risk highest with testosterone-marketed products

Supplement contamination is not a theoretical risk — it is a well-documented analytical chemistry finding with real consequences for athletes subject to doping control. The supplement industry operates under minimal regulatory oversight (DSHEA 1994 classified supplements as food, not drugs), meaning manufacturers bear self-policing responsibility that many exercise inadequately.

The Contamination Problem

Geyer et al. (2004, PMID 15254749) tested 634 non-hormonal supplements purchased in 13 countries and found 14.8% contained undeclared anabolic steroids or prohormones. These were not products marketed for testosterone enhancement — they were standard sports nutrition products. The contamination was not disclosed anywhere on the label.

USADA estimates approximately 25% of positive doping cases in competitive sport involve supplement contamination. Under the World Anti-Doping Code’s strict liability principle, athletes bear full responsibility regardless of the contamination source.

Risk by Category

Supplement CategoryContamination RiskCommon ContaminantsRecommended CertificationNotes
Weight-loss / fat burnersVery high (~25%)Ephedrine, sibutramine, thyroid hormones, DNPInformed Sport or avoidDNP is potentially lethal
Testosterone boostersVery high (~20–25%)Anabolic steroids, prohormones, DHEAInformed Sport; extreme cautionTargeted at exact WADA-prohibited substances
Pre-workout formulasHigh (~20%)DMAA, DMBA, methylhexaneamine, stimulantsNSF for Sport or Informed SportStimulant adulterants commonly found
Protein powdersModerate (~15%)Anabolic steroids, prohormonesNSF for Sport or Informed SportRisk higher in “muscle building” variants
Creatine monohydrateLowTrace steroids (cross-contamination)NSF for Sport for competitionPure monohydrate from reputable source is low risk
Vitamins and mineralsLowHeavy metals (some); generally cleanUSP Verified adequateSingle-ingredient products from established brands

Third-Party Testing Tiers

CertificationWhat It TestsWADA List ScreenedBatch-Level TestingBest For
Informed SportWADA banned listYes (full)YesCompetitive athletes
NSF Certified for SportWADA banned list + heavy metalsYes (full)YesCompetitive athletes
Informed ChoiceAbbreviated WADA screenPartialSometimesRecreational athletes
USP VerifiedIngredient identity, purity, potencyNoNoGeneral quality; not doping safety
Consumer LabIngredient accuracyNoNoLabel accuracy verification
GMP Certified (FDA)Manufacturing practicesNoNoFacility quality only

Safe Sourcing Checklist

For any athlete subject to drug testing:

  1. Use only products bearing NSF for Sport or Informed Sport certification
  2. Record the lot number of each product purchased — certifications are batch-specific
  3. Avoid novel pre-workouts and proprietary blends from small brands
  4. When in doubt, check USADA Supplement 411 (usada.org/supplements) before purchasing
  5. Understand that price and brand reputation are not substitutes for certified testing
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Frequently Asked Questions

How common is supplement contamination really?

More common than the industry acknowledges. Geyer et al. (PMID 15254749) tested 634 non-hormonal supplements and found 14.8% contained undeclared anabolic steroids. A 2014 JAMA study found banned substances still present in products months after FDA recalls. The risk is not evenly distributed — weight-loss products, testosterone boosters, and pre-workouts carry the highest contamination rates.

If a supplement causes a positive doping test, am I still responsible?

Under WADA's strict liability rule, yes — athletes are responsible for everything they consume, regardless of the source. Supplement contamination is not a valid defense that cancels a ban; it may reduce the sanction length in some cases, but the positive test stands. This is why athletes competing at any serious level should exclusively use products certified by NSF for Sport or Informed Sport.

What certifications actually matter for athletes?

NSF Certified for Sport and Informed Sport are the two gold standards for competition-level athletes. Both screen for WADA prohibited substances on a batch-by-batch basis and provide a lot number that can be traced. Informed Sport is widely considered the most rigorous. USP Verified and Consumer Lab are quality certifications but do not screen for the full WADA banned list.

What types of supplements have the highest contamination risk?

In descending order of risk: (1) weight-loss and fat-burning products (~25% contamination rate, often contain ephedrine, stimulants, thyroid hormones); (2) sexual enhancement and testosterone boosters (~20–25%, often contain anabolic steroids or prohormones); (3) pre-workout formulas (~20%, stimulant contamination including DMAA/methylhexaneamine); (4) protein powders (~15%). Plain vitamins and minerals from reputable brands carry the lowest risk.

Does FDA testing protect athletes from contaminated supplements?

No. Under DSHEA 1994, supplements are classified as food — manufacturers do not need FDA approval before selling a product. FDA can only act after harm is documented. Cohen et al. (JAMA 2014, PMID 25335153) found banned drugs still present in supplements months after FDA recalls. Athletes cannot rely on FDA oversight for competition safety — independent third-party testing is the only reliable protection.

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