Evaluation for Genetic Disorders in the Absence of a Clinical Indication for Testing: Elective Genomic Testing

Publication date: Available online 17 November 2018Source: The Journal of Molecular DiagnosticsAuthor(s): James T. Lu, Matthew Ferber, Jill Hagenkord, Elissa Levin, Sarah South, Hyunseok P. Kang, Kimberly A. Strong, David P. BickAbstractThe increasing quality and diminishing cost of next-generation sequencing has transformed our ability to interrogate large quantities of genetic information. This has led to a dramatic increase in the number of elective genomic tests performed. In this article elective test denotes a test that a patient chooses to undertake without a clinical indication. The variety of elective genomic testing options is considerable. Because these offerings provide differing levels of sensitivity and specificity it can be difficult to choose among them. A simple rubric to compare offerings is not readily available. We propose a framework designated “completeness” that evaluates both analytical and interpretative components of genomic tests. We then illustrate how this framework can be used to evaluate the expanding landscape of elective genomic testing.
Source: The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics - Category: Pathology Source Type: research
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