I guess. I can't speak for everyone else, but I've felt that doping was possible in any sport and that it was just that some sports have bigger issues than others. I can think of a few ways that skating would be helped by doping, particularly in the area of recovery and endurance.
The issue is whether the risks are worth the benefits. From my experiences figure skating vs. doing an endurance sport, I don't think they are. There are a few things that can help a little in figure skating but the consequences of getting caught make them not worth it. This is not true in endurance sports which is why some of them, such as cycling and track & field, are riddled with doping and there is a lot of turning of a blind eye because TPTB
In figure skating, most of what holds people back is injuries, overuse injuries and injuries caused by accidents. It's not a sport where you can't recover from the workout of the day before in order to work even harder the next day without artificial help. This is why you rarely hear figure skaters complain they would skate more hours if only they could recover better. Instead, what mostly limits their training hours is trying to avoid overuse injuries. (And probably also money.)
And talent and technique. There is no drug out there that will give Jason Brown a quad. It's a combination of technique and talent. If there was one, male skaters would probably take it because you need a quad to get to the top. Now if you can't land a quad in competition because of nerves maybe a beta blocker would help. Or not. Those things are iffier. So you are risking a lot for a small (or no) benefit.
So, the bottom line is: the cost isn't worth the benefit because the cost is big but the benefit is small.
The reason it's worth it in other sports is that athletes are limited by things that PEDs help with to a much larger degree. So if talent and hard work gets you to run a 6 min mile and taking PEDs gets you to run a 5 min. mile and you need to run a 5 min mile to podium in your particular event, the temptation is strong. And if you know or suspect that everyone who is beating you is only doing it because they are doping, the temptation is even stronger. That's not the situation in figure skating.
If doping and figure skating were incompatible in Russia, Bobrova and Tuktamysheva and a host of others wouldn't be taking drugs for conditions they didn't have, case in point Meldonium.
No, that is not a good example because these athletes only took meldonium when it was legal. All sports have a culture of using any legal edge you can get; that doesn't necessarily mean they all have the same attitude towards using illegal means. You need a different example if you want to prove that.