8 votes

Very rare pathogenic genetic variants detected by SNP-chips are usually false positives: implications for direct-to-consumer genetic testing

3 comments

  1. Cuspist
    Link
    The technology used in direct-to-consumer genetic testing performs very poorly in the detection of rare pathogenic variants, with postive predictive values for BRCA1 and 2 variants of only 4.2%....

    The technology used in direct-to-consumer genetic testing performs very poorly in the detection of rare pathogenic variants, with postive predictive values for BRCA1 and 2 variants of only 4.2%.

    Relevant article from The Guardian, discussing how this is problematic when consumers that may not fully understand the technical limitations see these variants in their raw data.

    2 votes
  2. eladnarra
    Link
    Yeah, I honestly wouldn't trust consumer genotyping for medical conditions. As far as I'm aware there's also a high likelihood of pathogenic mutations not being detected - I doubt my particular...

    Yeah, I honestly wouldn't trust consumer genotyping for medical conditions. As far as I'm aware there's also a high likelihood of pathogenic mutations not being detected - I doubt my particular BRCA2 mutation, which has only been detected in a couple different families, would show up, for example. It's just the nature of the test.

    2 votes
  3. Wes
    Link
    It's worth considering that consumer genetic testing is usually not focused on rare diseases. These companies are more interested in either ancestry or layman-accessible genetic information....

    It's worth considering that consumer genetic testing is usually not focused on rare diseases. These companies are more interested in either ancestry or layman-accessible genetic information. Something they can sell as a service (or possibly to third-parties).

    I'm sure a consumer chip could be built which puts more emphasis on rare disease if that were desired. The technology is also getting better so more SNPs can be recorded.

    A few years back I opted for Ancestry, not because I cared about the family tree stuff, but because they had the most-encompassing chip at the time and allowed me to download the raw data. I plugged that data into Promethease which offers a graphical representation and displays data from SNPedia.

    But yes, I'd still be skeptical of any rare disease claims.