Evidence Does Not Support Commercial Rush Of DNA Tests Designed To Inform Decisions Regarding Patients’ Psychiatric Medications, Review Indicates

STAT (9/28, Robbins) reported that “several dozen companies” are now “probing patients’ DNA in search of insights to help inform decisions about what psychiatry medications patients should take,” and are even “touting applications for depression, bipolar disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder.” Now, “some top psychiatrists say the evidence doesn’t support the commercial rush.” In fact, in a review published online April 25 in the American Journal of Psychiatry, “a task force of the American Psychiatric Association’s research council concluded that such genetic testing is not ready for prime time in their field.” The members of the task force wrote, “Although some of the preliminary published data sound promising…there is insufficient evidence to support widespread use of combinatorial pharmacogenetic decision support tools at this point in time.”

Related Links:

— “In the race to use genetic tests to predict whether antidepressants will work, science might be getting left behind, “Rebecca Robbins, STAT, September 28, 2018.

Posted in In The News.