I Had My DNA Picture Taken, With Varying Results
Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
By KIRA PEIKOFF
Published: December 30, 2013 421 Comments
I like to plan ahead; that much I knew about myself
before I plunged into exploring my genetic code. I’m a healthy
28-year-old woman, but some nasty diseases run in my family: coronary heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer’s and breast cancer.
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So I decided to read the tea leaves of my DNA. I reasoned that it was
worth learning painful information if it might help me avert future
illness.
Like others, I turned to genetic testing, but I wondered if I could
trust the nascent field to give me reliable results. In recent years, a
handful of studies have found substantial variations in the risks for
common diseases predicted by direct-to-consumer companies.
I set out to test the tests: Could three of them agree on me?
The answers were eye-opening — and I received them just as one of the companies, 23andMe, received a stern warning from the Food and Drug Administration
over concerns about the accuracy of its product. At a time when the
future of such companies hangs in the balance, their ability to deliver
standardized results remains dubious, with far-reaching implications for
consumers.
My experiment ran into hurdles from the start. After I ordered 23andMe’s
saliva test kit, which for $99 promised a report on more than 240
health conditions and traits, it turned out that I could not legally
send it in; the New York State Health Department forbids any labs that
lack a state permit to accept specimens from a health-related test.
Luckily, my in-laws mailed it from their home in New Jersey.
Then I learned that the other two companies I planned to approach were
no longer offering genetic testing. Additional research led me to two
more: Genetic Testing Laboratories and Pathway Genomics. G.T.L. charged
$285 for a report on 25 disease risks, and required a professional
sample collector to draw blood; Pathway charged $399 for a report on 24
disease risks. (In 2010, Pathway planned to sell its saliva test kit at
Walgreens, but abandoned the idea after the F.D.A. challenged the sales.
Now Pathway requires a doctor to order a kit on a patient’s behalf.)
After my tests had been sent, I braced myself for the revelations about
my DNA. It took about two months to receive all the results, and when I
did, the discrepancies were striking.
23andMe said my most elevated risks — about double the average for women of European ethnicity — were for psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis,
with my lifetime odds of getting the diseases at 20.2 percent and 8.2
percent. But according to Genetic Testing Laboratories, my lowest risks were for — you guessed it — psoriasis (2 percent) and rheumatoid arthritis (2.6 percent).
For coronary heart disease,
23andMe and G.T.L. agreed that I had a close-to-average risk, at 26 to
29 percent, but Pathway listed my odds as “above average.”
In the case of Type 2 diabetes,
inconsistencies on a semantic level masked similarities in the numbers.
G.T.L. said my risk was “medium” at 10.3 percent, but 23andMe said my
risk was “decreased” at 15.7 percent. In fact, both companies had
calculated my odds to be roughly three-quarters of the average, but they
used slightly different averages — and very different words — to
interpret the numbers. In isolation, the first would have left me
worried; the second, relieved.
Medical ethicists and other experts have a different kind of worry about
results like these: a lack of industry standards for weighing risk
factors and defining terminology.
“The ‘risk is in the eye of the beholder’ standard is not going to work,” said Arthur L. Caplan,
director of medical ethics at the New York University Langone Medical
Center. “We need to get some kind of agreement on what is high risk,
medium risk and low risk.”
Several other problems may account for my discrepancies. The genetic
testing that these three companies offer is premised on reading segments
of DNA called SNPs (pronounced snips), for single nucleotide
polymorphisms. But these segments, which have been linked to diseases in
research studies, vary among people.
Scientists have identified about 10 million SNPs within our three
billion nucleotides. But an entire genome sequencing — looking at all
three billion nucleotides — would cost around $3,000; the tests I took
examined fewer than a million SNPs.
“Imagine if you took a book and you only looked at the first letter of every other page,” said Dr. Robert Klitzman,
a bioethicist and professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia. (I am a
graduate student there in his Master of Bioethics program.) “You’re
missing 99.9 percent of the letters that make the genome. The
information is going to be limited.”
Companies choose which SNPs to read. By comparing the technical reports
provided with my results, I found that my tests sometimes relied on
different SNPs to assess the same condition, like coronary heart
disease. Each test studied four to 15 markers, with almost zero overlap,
though two tests reached similar conclusions about my odds.
In the case of rheumatoid arthritis, though, the tests examined the same
five markers, plus a few others, and delivered contradictory
interpretations.
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