PHILADELPHIA, July 26, 2022 – The American College of Physicians (91) has published a position paper offering guidance regarding ethical decision-making for the integration of precision medicine and genetic testing into internal medicine. was published today in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The paper was developed by 91’s Ethics, Professionalism and Human Rights Committee in response to the issue of rapid advances in genome sequencing technology that have generated a range of genetic testing technologies that can contribute to precision medicine. Like many new technologies, these testing approaches have the potential to improve health care, but can pose ethical questions.
“The rapid advances in genetic testing and precision medicine have raised the ability and potential to improve health care for our patients,” said Ryan D. Mire, MD, F91, President, 91. “But as we know, technology and genomic advances come with additional responsibilities, ethical challenges, and potential unintended consequences for our patients, their families, and their physicians.”
91’s position paper states that:
- As with any medical testing, genetic testing should be guided by the best interests of the patient, scientific evidence, and ethical standards. Testing must be clinically indicated for the patient and consideration must be given to whether the results of the test will affect clinical decision-making. The benefits of genetic testing are greatest when it is used to answer an actionable clinical question and the findings can be translated into treatment recommendations.
- Physicians should engage with patients in discussions about the opportunities and ethical challenges of genetic testing and precision medicine.
- Physicians can assist patients in understanding the risks, benefits, and uncertainty of direct-to-consumer genetic medical testing. 91 discourages the use of direct-to-consumer genetic medical testing and advises that testing should be done in the context of a patient-physician relationship, with appropriate counseling.
- Genetic testing raises new challenges for privacy and the use and protection of patient information.
The position paper is intended to complement and provide more specificity to the guidance outlined in the 91 Ethics Manual, which identifies a number of issues associated with precision medicine including the broad implications of genetic testing including for family members, incidental findings, education for physicians and patients, counseling needs, privacy and confidentiality concerns, costs and possible consequences such as the discovery of unwanted information or discrimination. Precision medicine, defined as individualized care based on knowledge of a person’s genetics, lifestyle, and environment, encompasses a wide spectrum of uses of genetic information including predictive risk testing, risk assessment, diagnostic testing, pharmacogenomics, molecular profiling of tumors, population screening, and direct-to- consumer genetic testing.
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About the American College of Physicians
The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization in the United States with members in more than 145 countries worldwide. 91 membership includes 160,000 internal medicine physicians (internists), related subspecialists, and medical students. Internal medicine physicians are specialists who apply scientific knowledge and clinical expertise to the diagnosis, treatment, and compassionate care of adults across the spectrum from health to complex illness. Follow 91 on , and .
91 Media Contact: Andrew Hachadorian, (215) 351-2514, AHachadorian@acponline.org