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Ask HN: What's the state of consumer genomics in 2023?
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16 points
by Kratacoa
1036 days ago
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Over the past two days I've got interested in the topic, and I can find a lot of information from around 2018. However, I've been unable to find a comprehensive, detailed recap of the situation as of 2023, from someone who beholds a modicum of authority on the topic. Surely things must have changed (e.g. cheaper sequencing devices), and I'm just bad at finding the information? Goals I'm interested in: sequencing accuracy, quality of diagnostics, privacy, genealogical features. For what it's worth, I'm based in Europe. |
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I would guess that's because this was just a passing fad.
Genetics is an extremely complex topic. And we still don't know a lot of things.
This is why I think nobody was able to create something useful for consumers.
For accuracy I think the 'next generation' methods are pretty good. Especicially when we talk about reference-based sequencing. This is the case when we already have an assembled genome when can use to compare our new data.
For diagnostics it's not that useful when we talk in the context of a large population. There are some diseases associated with some single nucleotide mutation (SNP [0]). The is that in most cases we don't have a way to reliable to say "mutation X causes y". In general the medical history of your family is way more useful than any genetic testing.
For privacy this is a nightmare.
For genealogical information they don't provide anything meaningfull.
[0] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-nucleotide_polymorphism