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Bows to FDA demands; good for NY and MD?

DNA testing company 23andMe yesterday suspended its health-related testing in compliance with an FDA directive issued last month. Ancestry-related DNA tests will continue without interruption and raw genetic data will continue to be available as well.

The Legal Genealogist wants to repeat that: Ancestry-related DNA tests will continue without interruption and raw genetic data will continue to be available as well.

23.FDA2In other words, the 23andMe sky is not falling when it comes to genetic genealogy. And, in fact, if you’re from New York or Maryland, this may be very good news for you.

If you bought a test kit from 23andMe before the FDA issued its directive, you’ll get all the results previously offered, including health results. If you bought it afterwards, you’ll get ancestry-related results only. If you’re unhappy enough about that limit that you want your money back, 23andMe says it will offer refunds to new customers.

Anyone heading to the 23andMe website for the first time today is greeted with this message:

At this time, we have suspended our health-related genetic tests to comply with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s directive to discontinue new consumer access during our regulatory review process.

We are continuing to provide you with both ancestry-related genetic tests and raw genetic data, without 23andMe’s interpretation.

If you are an existing customer please click the button below and then go to the health page for additional information. If you are a customer who purchased before November 22, 2013, you will still have access to your health-related results.

We remain firmly committed to fulfilling our long-term mission to help people everywhere have access to their own genetic data and have the ability to use that information to improve their lives.

Upon entering the site, please confirm you understand the new changes in our services.1

And the statement the user has to agree to:

I understand that 23andMe only sells ancestry reports and raw genetic data at this time. I understand 23andMe will not provide health-related reports. However, 23andMe may provide health-related results in the future, dependent upon FDA marketing authorization.2

And in a statement issued late yesterday, the company said that “it will comply immediately with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s directive to discontinue consumer access to its health-related genetic tests during the ongoing regulatory review process. The company will continue to provide consumers both ancestry-related information and raw genetic data without interpretation. In addition, the company will continue to conduct research using its database of genetic and phenotypic data, and also will continue its educational efforts.”3

In the statement, Anne Wojcicki, co-founder and CEO of 23andMe, was quoted as saying: “We remain firmly committed to fulfilling our long-term mission to help people everywhere have access to their own genetic data and have the ability to use that information to improve their lives. Our goal is to work cooperatively with the FDA to provide that opportunity in a way that clearly demonstrates the benefit to people and the validity of the science that underlies the test.”’4

So how did 23andMe come to this?

The suspension came about after the federal Food and Drug Administration sent what’s called a warning letter to 23andMe on November 22nd, laying out a litany of complaints it had with respect to the health claims made for the 23andMe DNA test, called the Personal Genome Service (“PGS”), and giving it 15 days to stop marketing the service.5

This test has long been regarded as an “medical device” by the FDA. That’s a statutorily-defined term meaning “an instrument, apparatus, implement, machine, contrivance, implant, in vitro reagent, or other similar or related article, including any component, part, or accessory, which is-… intended for use in the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, in man or other animals.”6

At no time has the FDA ever been concerned about the ancestry part of DNA testing, and it’s made that crystal clear: “A genetic test is only subject to FDA oversight if it is a medical device; that is, if it is intended for use in the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease. … (A) test to determine ancestry is not a device.”7

So what got 23andMe into trouble had nothing to do with genealogy or tests for ancestry. It had to do entirely with its health testing and its claims that “Testing with 23andMe can tell you hundreds of things about your health.”8 Or “23andMe can help you manage risk and make informed decisions.”9 Or its provision of “health recommendations” for its customers, such as “if you take a blood thinner called warfarin (Coumadin®) you may require a lower dose.”10

23andMe had previously agreed with the FDA that its health-related testing was subject to FDA regulation and began the process in 2012 of securing FDA approval. Exactly what happened to disrupt that process isn’t clear, but the FDA letter offers big hints:

In your letter dated January 9, 2013, you stated that the firm is “completing the additional analytical and clinical validations for the tests that have been submitted” and is “planning extensive labeling studies that will take several months to complete.” Thus, months after you submitted your (applications) and more than 5 years after you began marketing, you still had not completed some of the studies and had not even started other studies necessary to support a marketing submission for the PGS. It is now eleven months later, and you have yet to provide FDA with any new information about these tests. You … did not provide the additional information we requested necessary to complete review …, and FDA has not received any communication from 23andMe since May. Instead, we have become aware that you have initiated new marketing campaigns, including television commercials that, together with an increasing list of indications, show that you plan to expand the PGS’s uses and consumer base without obtaining marketing authorization from FDA.11

And the letter left no room for doubt about the FDA’s view of 23andMe’s health testing: “23andMe must immediately discontinue marketing the PGS until such time as it receives FDA marketing authorization for the device.”12

Yesterday’s suspension of the health testing was the inevitable result.

So what does this mean for us, as genetic genealogists? For the time being, nothing bad. As predicted, the FDA isn’t shutting 23andMe down,13 and we can continue to use 23andMe for ancestry testing.

In fact, there may be one surprisingly good result for some folks: laws in New York and Maryland that impacted 23andMe tests because of its health testing aspects14 suddenly don’t apply any more to this ancestry-only test. The 23andMe website doesn’t say that yet — but it’s crystal clear that the only reason why those laws affected 23andMe was because of its now-suspended health test.

For ancestry testing, there’s no reason as of today why New York would insist that the test itself be taken outside of New York (so no more taking the kit across the river and mailing it back from New Jersey!) and no reason why Maryland would forbid the test without a doctor’s involvement. I expect that, as an ancestry-only testing company, 23andMe will start accepting kits mailed from New York and start selling kits in Maryland in short order.

Whether 23andMe can survive as an ancestry-only testing company long enough to resolve its differences with the FDA is another matter altogether. Personally, I wouldn’t hesitate to go ahead and test with 23andMe right now since the test is so inexpensive. The $99 cost to fish in the 23andMe pond, even for ancestry only, is worth it.

But I also wouldn’t hesitate to make sure I had all my results — raw data, match lists and more — downloaded safely offline just in case. Blogger Roberta Estes of DNAeXplained has good suggestions as to that, and directions on how to do it.15

And, like everyone else, I’d stay tuned for the next installment of 23andMe and the FDA…


SOURCES

  1. Welcome to 23andMe,” entry page, 23andMe.com (https://www.23andme.com : accessed 5 Dec 2013).
  2. Ibid.
  3. 23andme, Inc. Provides Update on FDA Regulatory Review,” 23andMe Media Center (http://mediacenter.23andme.com/press-releases/ : accessed 5 Dec 2013).
  4. Ibid.
  5. FDA, Warning Letters, “23andMe, Inc. 11/22/13,” FDA.gov (http://www.fda.gov : accessed 25 Nov 2013).
  6. 21 U.S.C. §321(h)(2).
  7. Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing and the Consequences to the Public,” Congressional Testimony, Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., Director, FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health, 22 July 2010, FDA.gov (http://www.fda.gov/ : accessed 25 Nov 2013).
  8. ScottH, “Change What You Can, Manage What You Can’t,” 23andMe Blog, posted 19 Aug 2013 (http://blog.23andme.com : accessed 25 Nov 2013).
  9. Screen-capture, 23andMe homepage, 4 Nov 2012; image captured by author.
  10. Key Health Recommendations, JG Russell, 23andMe (https://www.23andme.com/you/features/recommendations/ : accessed 26 Nov 2013).
  11. FDA, Warning Letters, “23andMe, Inc. 11/22/13,” FDA.gov (http://www.fda.gov : accessed 25 Nov 2013).
  12. Ibid.
  13. See Judy G. Russell, “Fooling with FDA,” The Legal Genealogist, posted 26 Nov 2013 (https://www.legalgenealogist.com/blog : accessed 5 Dec 2013).
  14. See ibid., “NY and MD limits on 23andMe,” posted 23 Dec 2012.
  15. Roberta Estes, “Now What? – 23andMe and the FDA,” DNAeXplained, posted 26 Nov 2013 (http://dna-explained.com/ : accessed 26 Nov 2013).
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