Litcius/Paper detail

Direct-to-consumer laboratory testing (DTCT): challenges and implications for specialists in laboratory medicine

Matthias Orth, Erik R. Vollebregt, Tommaso Trenti, Patti Shih, Mette Christophersen Tollånes, Sverre Sandberg

2022Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM)18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

diagnostics (IVD) testing is a powerful tool for medical diagnosis, and patients' safety is guaranteed by a complex system of personnel qualification of the specialist in laboratory medicine, of process control, and legal restrictions in healthcare, most of them under national regulation. Direct-to-consumer laboratory testing (DTCT) is testing ordered by the consumer and performed either by the consumer at home or analysis of self-collected samples in a laboratory. However, since DTCT are not always subject to effective competent authority oversight, DTCT may pose risks to lay persons using and relying on it for healthcare decision-making. Laboratory medicine specialists should be very cautious when new DTCTs are introduced. As qualified professionals, they should feel obliged to warn and educate patients and the public about the risks of inappropriate and harmful DTCT.

Topics & Concepts

Medical laboratoryConsumer safetyControl (management)Health careTest (biology)Consumer protectionMedicineBusinessMedical emergencyRisk analysis (engineering)NursingComputer scienceLawPolitical scienceCommerceArtificial intelligencePaleontologyBiologyHealthcare cost, quality, practicesEthics in Clinical ResearchBiomedical Ethics and Regulation
Direct-to-consumer laboratory testing (DTCT): challenges and implications for specialists in laboratory medicine | Litcius