7 research outputs found

    The Rise of the Ethical License

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    The Broad Institute's recent licensing of its gene editing patent portfolio demonstrates how licenses can be used to restrict controversial applications of emerging technologies while society deliberates their implications.Ope

    Barriers to clinical adoption of next generation sequencing: Perspectives of a policy Delphi panel

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    AbstractThis research aims to inform policymakers by engaging expert stakeholders to identify, prioritize, and deliberate the most important and tractable policy barriers to the clinical adoption of next generation sequencing (NGS). A 4-round Delphi policy study was done with a multi-stakeholder panel of 48 experts. The first 2 rounds of online questionnaires (reported here) assessed the importance and tractability of 28 potential barriers to clinical adoption of NGS across 3 major policy domains: intellectual property, coverage and reimbursement, and FDA regulation. We found that: 1) proprietary variant databases are seen as a key challenge, and a potentially intractable one; 2) payer policies were seen as a frequent barrier, especially a perceived inconsistency in standards for coverage; 3) relative to other challenges considered, FDA regulation was not strongly perceived as a barrier to clinical use of NGS. Overall the results indicate a perceived need for policies to promote data-sharing, and a desire for consistent payer coverage policies that maintain reasonably high standards of evidence for clinical utility, limit testing to that needed for clinical care decisions, and yet also flexibly allow for clinician discretion to use genomic testing in uncertain circumstances of high medical need

    Regulatory controls for direct-to-consumer genetic tests: a case study on how the FDA exercised its authority

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    In February 2015, 23andMe received clearance from the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for a carrier status test for a gene linked to Bloom syndrome. This was the first FDA authorization to market a direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic test. Then, in April 2017, 23andMe obtained marketing clearance for an additional 10 tests that communicate information about individual disease risk. For roughly a decade it had been unclear whether FDA would regulate health-related DTC genetic tests. The recent approvals now provide an opportunity to examine how the Agency, in practice, has exercised its regulatory authority. This paper is the first case study to examine in detail how FDA has set standards for the marketing approval of DTC genetic tests
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