As I understand it, you can still get testing done, but 23andMe will not analyze your data. However, you can browse your own data, download it and submit it to various low cost analysis sites. For all intents and purposes, 23andMe is still as useful to me as it ever was, since their analysis wasn't that interesting. Their ancestry analysis and relative finder is also still in place. I've played with it a little, and it's kind of cool.
For what it's worth, I learned a bit more about this particular FDA crackdown. The FDA was fine with 23andMe selling their services to interested people like us. However, not too long ago, 23andMe put together a glitzy advertising campaign that was reminiscent of the DTC ads out of Big Pharma. They were basically making a ton of unfounded health claims. Not only am I not the least bit surprised that FDA intervened, but I think it was the right call. The FDA is charged with protecting noobs from charlatans, which means that claims need to be validated. I know that some people think that's totally wrong, and that we'd be better off without the FDA. It's possible that I personally would be better off if there was no FDA, but I can't say the same thing about a lot of my friends, family, and neighbors.
Even non-noobs. Much was made of how ridiculous it would be if someone actually did chop her breasts off based on a false positive BRCA test just on 23andme without confirming. But what they missed was the real medical consequences of other plausible behaviors following from inaccurate tests. What if, say, someone tests falsely
negative for the BRCA breast cancer mutation on 23andme and took no further steps to prevent cancer? Or if someone tested falsely positive for being homozygous for the CCR5-Delta32 mutation and therefore believed himself to be HIV-immune and acted accordingly?
I am not a noob, I use 23andme, and I have to say even I have an interest in the accuracy of their testing being verified by a disinterested third party.
Edited by nowayout, 27 December 2013 - 06:08 AM.