“the u.k. has got the whole thing figured out. the latest news is quite incredible,” scherer said. “we need a national strategy in this country, and we don’t have one.”
“the game-changer here is that with one test, we get all the genes,” he continued. “for better or worse, we get all of it.”
for the non-scientist, it’s hard to imagine how there could be a “worse” side to more comprehensive, accurate medical testing. but the question of whether knowing all of a patient’s genetic information might be a bit of medical tmi is actually very controversial in the health-care world.
and the test does cost money. it’s not the year 2000 anymore, so it doesn’t take a decade and $3 billion to sequence all your genes — more like a few days and about $1,000 u.s. in a research setting.
currently, patients are offered a series of conventional genetic tests that get more useful, but also pricier for the health-care system, as you go, said robin hayeems, an associate professor of health policy at the university of toronto and a scientist who studies cost-effective health care at sickkids.
the cheapest test turns up a definitive diagnosis about 15 per cent of the time, and the most expensive, about 20 to 30 per cent. whole-genome sequencing, which provides all the information the other tests do, plus more, cracks 30 to 40 per cent of cases. scherer puts the number at 43 per cent. based on sticker price, whole-genome sequencing would seem to be the better deal.