Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Powerful Genetic Testing Provides Patients With Plenty Of Data, But Few Concrete Answers
At a time when genetic testing and genetically personalized treatments for cancer are proliferating, buoyed by new resources like President Obamas $215 million personalized medicine initiative, women with breast cancer are facing a frustrating reality: The genetic data is there, but in many cases, doctors do not know what to do with it. ... Doctors have long been tantalized by a future in which powerful methods of genetic testing would allow treatments to be tailored to a patients genetic makeup. Today, in breast cancer treatment, testing of tumors and healthy cells to look for mutations has become standard. But ... our ability to sequence genes has gotten ahead of our ability to know what it means, said Eric P. Winer, the director of the breast oncology program at Harvards Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. (Kolata, 3/11)