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Need to Protect Consumers from Exaggerated Claims of Home Genetic Tests

by Savitha C Muppala on Aug 21 2010 7:42 PM

It is important to protect consumers from exaggerated claims of home genetic tests, a new study has suggested.

 Need to Protect Consumers from Exaggerated Claims of Home Genetic Tests
It is important to protect consumers from exaggerated claims of home genetic tests, a new study has suggested.
Direct to consumer (DTC) genetic tests are increasingly being marketed to the public via television, print ads, and the Internet.

These home genetic tests provide access to a person's genomic information without necessarily involving a doctor or insurance company in the process.

And now, medical geneticist Dr. James P. Evans, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine and colleagues have said that medical professionals "must ensure that rapidly evolving and multiplying genomic technologies are responsibly harnessed and that their promise is not oversold to the public."

In their article, the authors argued that "a primary role of health care professionals in the future may be to interpret their patients' DTC genetic test results and advise them about appropriate follow-up."

While the authors acknowledge that individuals should continue to be permitted direct access to their genomic information, they noted that "consumers must be protected from unrealistic claims and the misinterpretation of complex and dynamic genomic information."

Noting that segments of the public already embrace DTC genetic tests, the authors point out that in many cases, there is "little or no evidence of the clinical validity of tests developed from genetic technologies."

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The authors said that clinical validity data "are limited because they can be difficult and expensive to obtain and because there is no FDA requirement for the premarketing submission of such data for most genetic tests."

In testimony last month to the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Evans stressed that consumers "...deserve an honest accounting of what such information means and the assurance that it is derived in a manner that ensures quality, reliability and confidentiality."

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The study has been published in the Online First edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Source-ANI


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