the_rck: (Default)
the_rck ([personal profile] the_rck) wrote2016-11-16 02:01 pm

(no subject)

Damn. I just got my copy of the genetics report for cancer risks. It doesn’t actually tell me if I have the 'likely benign' PALB-2 variant that my sister has because they don’t bother reporting anything that they think is benign. One of the points of this exercise was to find out whether or not I have that specific variant. I could have variants on every gene tested, as long as someone in the US had labeled it benign, and never know.

::sighs:: I’ll see if the genetics counseling people have that information and if I can pry it out of them. I kind of suspect they won’t want to tell me.
heavenscalyx: (Default)

[personal profile] heavenscalyx 2016-11-16 07:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Ask them for the data instead of the report. If it was full sequencing, they may hand you a hard drive (those files can be upward of 100GB). If it was a SNP analysis, it should be a smallish file. Either way, I know a few tools one can use to look at this stuff.
heavenscalyx: (Default)

[personal profile] heavenscalyx 2016-11-16 07:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Note that either way, you having the data could be valuable to you in the future, given that your family has some problematic genetic variants and you want to avoid having to fight insurance for yet another round of sequencing/analysis.
lunabee34: (Default)

[personal profile] lunabee34 2016-11-16 08:18 pm (UTC)(link)
That is frustrating. :(

[identity profile] brunettepet.livejournal.com 2016-11-16 09:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, drat. Hopefully they'll share the information.
desdemonaspace: by <lj user="Teragramm"> (Default)

[personal profile] desdemonaspace 2016-11-17 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
I hope it's good news, or at least neutral.