I'd like to think that I'm libertarian on points where it matters. I think this is one of those points.23andme is a site where you get genetic sequencing done through the mail for about $250 (although the exact running price has been in flux). You then log into the site and it tells you what academic papers predict you will have or won't have. Sometimes different papers conflict, and it tells you that.For almost its entire existence, the organization has had a mallet hanging over their heads in the form of regulation. This is the latest update.http://spittoon.23andme.com/announcements/23andme-takes-first-step-toward-fda-clearance/The gist is that they submitted an application to the FDA. Why?
7/30/2012 3:04:46 PM
It should be regulated under the Constitution. If it's not violating the Constitution, then it's fair game.If a state would like to set their own regulations, that's fine, too, as long as the state's rules don't violate the constitution.
7/30/2012 4:01:54 PM
actually one of the fights they previously had was with California.The state had some rules someone realized could be interpreted as requiring a physician to be involved with genetic counseling.the problem is, nothing about the process even remotely makes a user think they're getting medical advice from certified doctors. The requirement is tantamount to writing laws saying that citizens can't do research about health, because only doctors should do that.
7/30/2012 4:21:40 PM
You mean kind of like that poor guy who had a blog about his own weightloss?
7/30/2012 5:21:30 PM
Do we know what the nature of the FDA regulations are? I can see some need for some sort of oversight of this service. Since the data is going to be used by people to help make health decisions, there should be some safeguards in place to ensure that the company's processes and methodologies are valid, that their quality control checks are in place, etc.
7/30/2012 5:28:36 PM
^ IMO your argument is totally and completely wrong, and I'm going to show you why, and it all comes down to the use of one single word.
7/30/2012 6:47:18 PM
How is genetic testing different from any other medical diagnostic service or test currently regulated by the FDA?
7/30/2012 8:50:19 PM
The problem with the FDA / DEA and all the other alphabet soup agencies involved in health care is the chilling effect that they have on the industry, especially because investors are a nervous bunch. The company I work for was doing some really awesome things to improve patient care, but a lot of them fell into that area of the law where because no one has ever done it before, there was no laws for how to do it or even if you can do it and it was a giant legal grey area. As a small company with pretty much just the owner/CEO invested, they were willing to take on some of those risks because nothing that was being done was actually against the law, and they were triple dotting i's and crossing t's to make sure that if someone ever questioned what was going on, they had all the evidence that everything was on the up and up. And the problem is, there's no one you can ask for clarification without basically suing the government, not exactly something you want to do when you're operating in a grey area.Eventually newer corporate investors were brought on board, and playing in a legal grey area scares the crap out of them, because all it takes is one government agent having a bad day and suddenly they can be slammed with huge fines, penalties or even have the business suspended. None of these are particularly likely scenarios given how much everything was documented, but it scares the investors none the less. So over the last year or so, they've been slowly scaling back all of those really neat services and features that the company provided and finding more traditional or safer routes, even if that means pissing off the customer base.There's nothing wrong with the FDA having regulations and certifications and procedures, but it should all be optional, like UL listings. After all, why shouldn't a consumer be able to buy a cheap test and then use that to decide if they want to have their doctor investigate the results more?
7/30/2012 11:43:28 PM
7/31/2012 9:14:06 AM
Well, if you can get ahold of an MRI and convince someone to climb inside it, why won't the medical community let you use it?
7/31/2012 10:34:55 AM
i think this is more along the lines of an otc test like a pregnancy test. if the results are concerning you're gonna go to the doc and they're gonna run their own tests. out of curiosity, how common/expensive are these genetic tests when done by PCPs?[Edited on July 31, 2012 at 10:46 AM. Reason : ']
7/31/2012 10:45:43 AM
^^ the problem with implied meaning is that no one has any idea what point you're trying to make
7/31/2012 10:46:04 AM
7/31/2012 1:40:15 PM
7/31/2012 2:47:46 PM
7/31/2012 10:52:22 PM
^^ Given the FDA's existing definition of an in-vitro diagnostic product, it's hard to see how 23andMe would not be considered such.23andMe's intended use is to provide "genetic testing for over 100 traits and diseases as well as DNA ancestry" (from their website). The prominantly displayed health section on the website strongly indicates 23andMe's desire to be involved with individual health care.
7/31/2012 10:59:59 PM
Missed the 30 minute edit window...
7/31/2012 11:49:39 PM
Hah you're right, not sure why I thought it meant that. For some reason I was confusing it with in-utero. Then yeah that completely applies and that actually is the broader tissue-testing classification I imagined would make more sense.[Edited on August 1, 2012 at 1:06 AM. Reason : l]
8/1/2012 1:05:25 AM
8/1/2012 8:38:19 AM
8/1/2012 12:03:52 PM
8/1/2012 1:00:16 PM
Typical of our over reaching, over regulating, overly pervasive government.
8/1/2012 2:17:32 PM
8/1/2012 4:22:02 PM
^ out of this page:https://www.23andme.com/health/all/I can find:Limb-girdle Muscular Dystrophy *Niemann-Pick Disease Type A *But to make the argument myself, it seems like Tay-Sachs might be the best available example of what you're talking about.
8/1/2012 5:00:20 PM
^ Yeah that's an "inborn error of metabolism," specifically a lysosomal storage disorder. Its probably the most familiar example of something that one might perform parental diagnostic screening for, but I had forgotten that there also is a late onset form of Tay-sachs that is indicated by combinations of two different mutant alleles (compound heterozygous.) Since the early symptoms of the progression of the disorder to disease can often mimic other far more common health problems, genetic testing would be a fairly good diagnostic tool in that case. But yeah good to point that one out, I had forgotten there was a form which was mostly asymptomatic until later in life for which this test could serve as a diagnostic tool in addition to screening.But yeah if you are homozygous or compound heterozygous for some of these sorts of conditions then you have the disorder. This is particularly true with diseases/disorders caused by inborn metabolic errors because if you two genes coding for abnormal proteins then will have that abnormal protein and only that abnormal protein. For those diseases, genetic testing is not just predictive but an extremely powerful diagnostic tool. Perhaps this is why they list all of those under screening - to attempt to avoid the reality that the information they are providing on those gene groups is diagnostic in nature even if we presume parental diagnostics don't count.The thing is though they provide information which can, if accurate, be used to diagnose some serious degenerative diseases while also providing diagnostic screening. The information they do present up-front and in pretty packaging can determine whether couples want to risk having children with each other. The complete test information they make available includes results which can be indicative of some (a minority of the things tested for) degenerative or chronic disorders despite what they claim in their disclaimers; some of the disease descriptions the provide admit this and state that if one is homozygous for this disease then one has this disease. [Edited on August 1, 2012 at 8:15 PM. Reason : asa]
8/1/2012 7:51:06 PM
I'm just a little confused by the use of the word "parental diagnostics". the idea is that potential parents would use the information to decide whether or not to have a child? They certainly wouldn't use their own genetic information to diagnose a potential child, when the combining of genes isn't deterministic in the first place...I still have trouble with yet another thing - what the role of FDA is when something is working, and really, I don't think that is the case. If it can be used to diagnose something serious, I don't think that is a reason to have agency intervention. I think the concern is different. from one of the stories:
8/2/2012 8:51:13 AM
What do you think FDA regulation of 23andMe will look like?
8/2/2012 11:59:03 AM
^^ Well that's why I think the decision to allow the product to stay on the market while requiring the submission of accuracy/efficacy data was a relatively reasonable regulatory action. Given that the 510(k) was submitted relatively recently and the process of working with the FDA had begun 3 years ago, it seems to me that the time-frame they were allowed has also been somewhat less than overwhelmingly burdensome. Compared to ordering a halt to sales until they were in compliance, this decision balances the mission of the FDA with the interest of the business and consumers involved. Whether this is a decision that is indicative of a reasonable and thoughtful regulator or clever negotiating on the part of 23andme is hard to say.Whether one agrees with the intent and mission of the FDA in general or not, the story of 23andme does not seem to be an example of overly intrusive or burdensome government regulation. Call it either an exception to the rule or an example of the new direction some federal regulatory agencies are heading if you want I suppose.[Edited on August 2, 2012 at 8:24 PM. Reason : 510k]
8/2/2012 8:12:48 PM