Athletes who tested positive for meldonium before March 1 could have bans overturned less than four months before the Rio de Janeiro Olympics after WADA said it was unable to establish how quickly the drug, outlawed since Jan. 1, cleared the human body. The World Anti-Doping Agency's notice to national anti-doping bodies is expected to have a major impact on many of the 172 athletes who have tested positive for the performance-boosting drug since January. They include five-time Grand Slam tennis champion Maria Sharapova, who was among 40 Russian athletes to test positive for the drug after it was added to WADA's list of banned substances in January. Sharapova's lawyer John Haggerty said Wednesday that WADA handled the issue "poorly" and was now trying to make up for it. WADA said there was a lack of clear scientific information on excretion times. "As a result it is difficult to know whether an athlete may have taken the substance before or after Jan. 1, when it became illegal," WADA said in a statement sent to anti-doping agencies and sports federations. "In these circumstances, WADA considers that there may be grounds for no fault or negligence on the part of the athlete," it said, adding that the presence of less than one microgram of meldonium in the samples was acceptable. As revealed by Reuters last month, the drug's Latvian manufacturer said traces could remain in the body for several months depending on doses, duration of treatment and sensitivity of testing methods The anti-doping body's notice also gave hope to athletes who have tested positive for the drug since March 1, depending on studies being carried out to determine how long it stays in the body. "Since meldonium was prohibited on 1 January of this year, there have been 172 positive samples for the substance, for athletes across numerous countries and sports," WADA President Craig Reedie said. "Concurrently there has been a call by stakeholders for further clarification and guidance," he said. "WADA recognizes this need — that meldonium is a particular substance, which has created an unprecedented situation and therefore warranted additional guidance for the anti-doping community." Sharapova, who said she had been taking meldonium for more than a decade because of health problems but had not used it since Jan. 1, was provisionally suspended by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) in March after announcing she had failed a test at the Australian Open. "The fact that WADA felt compelled to issue this unusual statement now is proof of how poorly they handled issues relating to meldonium in 2015," Haggerty said in a statement. Russian Tennis Federation President Shamil Tarpishchev said Sharapova's ban could be addressed in a meeting with ITF head David Haggerty this month. Meldonium, manufactured for people suffering from heart problems, can also increase blood flow and improve exercise capacity.