"Bridge to the Literature"? Third-Party Genetic Interpretation Tools and the Views of Tool Developers

被引:25
作者
Nelson, Sarah C. [1 ]
Fullerton, Stephanie M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Inst Publ Hlth Genet, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Bioeth & Humanities, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
Third-party interpretation; Direct-to-consumer genomic testing; Variant interpretation; Personal genomic testing; PRIMARY-CARE PHYSICIANS; EXPLORATION; EXPERIENCE; SERVICES; HEALTH;
D O I
10.1007/s10897-018-0217-9
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Patients and health care consumers can obtain access to their "raw," or uninterpreted, genetic data from direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies, researchers, or providers and pursue self-directed analysis via third-party interpretation tools. Yet relatively little is known about the nature of currently available interpretation tools or the motivations of tool developers. We conducted a structured content analysis of 23 third-party interpretation tool websites and supporting information, tracking features such as types of information returned, modes of generating and presenting that information, and privacy and security measures. We additionally conducted qualitative interviews with a subset of 10 tool developers. A majority of tools (16 of 23, or 70%) offer some type of health or wellness-related information, often extracted from publicly available variant annotation databases. Half of those interviewed characterized their activities as "bridging" users to the scientific literature rather than interpretation, for which they gave a variety of scientific, ethical, and regulatory justifications. The scale, heterogeneity, and complexity of information available from third-party interpretation are unprecedented. While developers aim to enlighten and empower tool users, interpretation-free "bridging" to rapidly evolving databases may instead impose burdens on genetic counselors and other health care providers asked to provide further contextualization and explanation.
引用
收藏
页码:770 / 781
页数:12
相关论文
共 34 条
[11]   Regulatory changes raise troubling questions for genomic testing [J].
Evans, Barbara J. ;
Dorschner, Michael O. ;
Burke, Wylie ;
Jarvik, Gail P. .
GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2014, 16 (11) :799-803
[12]  
Evans Barbara J, 2014, Univ Pa J Const Law, V16, P549
[13]  
Global Alliance for Genomics and Health, REG ETH TOOLK
[14]   openSNP-A Crowdsourced Web Resource for Personal Genomics [J].
Greshake, Bastian ;
Bayer, Philipp E. ;
Rausch, Helge ;
Reda, Julia .
PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (03)
[15]  
Karczewski KJ, 2012, BIOCOMPUT-PAC SYM, P339
[16]   Risky Business: Risk Perception and the Use of Medical Services among Customers of DTC Personal Genetic Testing [J].
Kaufman, David J. ;
Bollinger, Juli M. ;
Dvoskin, Rachel L. ;
Scott, Joan A. .
JOURNAL OF GENETIC COUNSELING, 2012, 21 (03) :413-422
[17]   Ancestry Testing and the Practice of Genetic Counseling [J].
Kirkpatrick, Brianne E. ;
Rashkin, Misha D. .
JOURNAL OF GENETIC COUNSELING, 2017, 26 (01) :6-20
[18]   ClinVar: public archive of interpretations of clinically relevant variants [J].
Landrum, Melissa J. ;
Lee, Jennifer M. ;
Benson, Mark ;
Brown, Garth ;
Chao, Chen ;
Chitipiralla, Shanmuga ;
Gu, Baoshan ;
Hart, Jennifer ;
Hoffman, Douglas ;
Hoover, Jeffrey ;
Jang, Wonhee ;
Katz, Kenneth ;
Ovetsky, Michael ;
Riley, George ;
Sethi, Amanjeev ;
Tully, Ray ;
Villamarin-Salomon, Ricardo ;
Rubinstein, Wendy ;
Maglott, Donna R. .
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2016, 44 (D1) :D862-D868
[19]  
LiveWello, GEN TOOLS
[20]   The lifestylisation of healthcare? 'Consumer genomics' andmobile health as technologies for healthy lifestyle [J].
Lucivero, Federica ;
Prainsack, Barbara .
APPLIED AND TRANSLATIONAL GENOMICS, 2015, 4 :44-49