Carlos Condit and Thiago Alves will only be required to pass a fight-night drug test in relation to Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 67 main event in Goiania, Goias, Brazil.

Both Condit (29-8 MMA, 6-4 UFC) and Alves (21-9 MMA, 13-6 UFC) confirmed to MMAjunkie that they have not been subjected to any random performance-enhancing drug testing in the weeks leading up to fight night.

An official from the Comissao Atletica Brasileira de MMA (CABMMA), Brazil’s athletic commission, confirmed the news to MMAjunkie and said Condit, Alves and the remaining 22 athletes on the card are only required to pass a fight-night urine test for the event.

“We have not drug tested Carlos and Thiago yet; no ‘camp’ tests have been done for this event,” a statement from CABMMA read. “All fighters will be tested upon arrival at arena on fight night through urine – anabolic steroids, stimulants, diuretics/other masking agents and drugs of abuse.”

Earlier this year the UFC announced an overhaul to its drug-testing policies. The organization plans to subject its entire roster of nearly 600 fighters to random performance-enhancing drug testing beginning July 1.

The Nevada State Athletic Commission, which typically sets an industry standard for regulatory bodies, followed by declaring sweeping changes to its drug testing policy, drastically increasing administrative punishments for those who found to have used banned substances.

Among the new guidelines, the minimum suspension for steroid offenders will be three years for a first offense and a fine of 40-50 percent of a fight purse. A third offense will result in a lifetime ban.

Any positive drug test will also overturn a win to a loss, rather than a no-contest, according to the new guidelines, which take effect Sept. 1.

Part of the UFC’s new policy included mandatory, enhanced out-of-competition testing to main event and championship fighters on all cards. The organization plans to help fund regulatory bodies, such as CABMMA, to apply this standard of testing.

The program hasn’t yet gone into place, though, and CABMMA did not test Condit or Alves during training camp prior to their welterweight headliner at Goiania Arena. The main card airs on FOX Sports 1 following prelims on the same channel and UFC Fight Pass.

Alves has a history with banned substances. “The Pitbull” tested positive for the diuretic Spironolactone following his UFC 66 victory over Tony DeSouza in December 2006. He was suspended eight months and fined $5,500 by the NSAC.

Condit, who said he supports the UFC’s efforts to push PED users out of the sport, expressed some disappointment in the situation.

“Maybe they don’t have the logistics down here (in Brazil) or it wasn’t a big enough fight, but I definitely didn’t get tested,” Condit said. “I would be open to whatever they want to do. I fully support what they’re dong in regards to drug testing in terms of the testing policy. I’m glad they’re doing it, but I don’t know (why I wasn’t tested).”

For more on UFC Fight Night 67, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.