Adopting genetics: motivations and outcomes of personal genomic testing in adult adoptees.

View Abstract

PURPOSE

American adult adoptees may possess limited information about their biological families and turn to direct-to-consumer personal genomic testing (PGT) for genealogical and medical information. We investigated the motivations and outcomes of adoptees undergoing PGT using data from the Impact of Personal Genomics (PGen) Study.

METHODS

The PGen Study surveyed new 23andMe and Pathway Genomics customers before and 6 months after receiving PGT results. Exploratory analyses compared adoptees' and nonadoptees' PGT attitudes, expectations, and experiences. We evaluated the association of adoption status with motivations for testing and postdisclosure actions using logistic regression models.

RESULTS

Of 1,607 participants, 80 (5%) were adopted. As compared with nonadoptees, adoptees were more likely to cite limited knowledge of family health history (OR = 10.1; 95% CI = 5.7-19.5) and the opportunity to learn genetic disease risks (OR = 2.7; 95% CI = 1.6-4.8) as strong motivations for PGT. Of 922 participants who completed 6-month follow-up, there was no significant association between adoption status and PGT-motivated health-care utilization or health-behavior change.

CONCLUSION

PGT allows adoptees to gain otherwise inaccessible information about their genetic disease risks and ancestry, helping them to fill the void of an incomplete family health history.Genet Med 18 9, 924-932.

Investigators
Abbreviation
Genet. Med.
Publication Date
2016-01-28
Volume
18
Issue
9
Page Numbers
924-32
Pubmed ID
26820063
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Adopting genetics: motivations and outcomes of personal genomic testing in adult adoptees.
Authors
Baptista NM, Christensen KD, Carere DA, Broadley SA, Roberts JS, Green RC