Harvard Health Information Home
 
   
 
 
PRESS RELEASES HealthBeat Newsletter
 
 
Home > Press Releases > Buyer beware of psychiatric genetic tests  
 
 

Buyer beware of psychiatric genetic tests, from the Harvard Mental Health Letter

May 2008

You can now buy a commercial genetic test that claims to assess your risk of developing bipolar disorder. Genetic tests for major depression and schizophrenia are also expected to reach the market soon. However, although the suspects are numerous, the genes responsible for most brain disorders remain unknown. So, when it comes to commercial genetic tests, we just don’t know enough to make the tests useful, reports the May issue of the Harvard Mental Health Letter.
One problem is that the genetics field is advancing so rapidly that it’s hard to keep up with developments, never mind figure out which ones are clinically relevant. Most experts also believe that psychiatric disorders develop because of the interplay between multiple genes, each exerting small effects. That makes finding the responsible genes harder. Further complicating matters, research has revealed that many healthy relatives of people with psychiatric disorders have risk genes. Whether a person develops an illness depends on unknown ways the risk genes interact with other genes and environmental factors.

Scientists have identified perhaps thousands of candidate genes that may contribute to psychiatric conditions. But experts continue to debate which genes are actually involved. Most candidate genes fail to hold up—meaning that the association between the gene and a given illness disappears when scientists try to replicate the results. One analysis estimated that 70% to 80% of candidate genes are false positives.

Dr. Michael Miller, editor in chief of the Harvard Mental Health Letter,notes that someday it may be possible to reliably assess risk for psychiatric disorders. But at this point, the technology—and the science—is still evolving.

Also in this issue of the Harvard Mental Health Letter:

  • Positive psychology
  • Behavioral cognitive therapy for addictions
  • Dealing with sexual side effects
  • Music therapy for depression
  • Arthritis and mood/anxiety disorders
  • Chromosome linked to autism
  • Song lyrics, stress, and substance abuse in adolescents

Harvard Mental Health Letter is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of the Harvard Medical School. You can subscribe at www.health.harvard.edu/mental or by calling 1-877-649-9457 toll-free.

SUBSCRIBE NOW 12 monthly issues (Print+Electronic) $59.00
SUBSCRIBE NOW 12 monthly issues (Electronic Only) $55.00

Related Information

Understating Depression: a special report on mental health
Click to enlarge

Understanding Depression

Depression affects nearly 19 million adults each year, yet this common disease is often misunderstood or misdiagnosed. While depression can’t simply be willed away by "shaking off" your blues, there are many effective treatments that can bring joy back into your life. Reading Understanding Depression and sharing it with those closest to you might help improve your life — or the life of someone close to you!. Read more

ADD TO CART Printed Version: $16.00
ADD TO CART Electronic Download (PDF): $16.00
ADD TO CART Print + Electronic Download (PDF): $24.00

RSS | XML FEED

About Harvard Health Publications
Harvard Health Publications publishes five monthly newsletters—Harvard Health Letter, Harvard Women's Health Watch, Harvard Men's Health Watch, Harvard Mental Health Letter, and Harvard Heart Letter—as well as more than 50 special health reports and books drawing on the expertise of the 8,000 faculty physicians at Harvard Medical School and its world-famous affiliated hospitals. For more information about Harvard Medical School publications, please visit our Web site, www.health.harvard.edu.

Source: Harvard Health Publications
Contact: hhpmedia@hms.harvard.edu
Web site: http://www.health.harvard.edu

 

Bookstore
Newsletters
Harvard Health Letter
Harvard Women’s Health Watch
Harvard Men’s Health Watch
Harvard Heart Letter
Harvard Mental Health Letter
Perspectives on Prostate Disease
Premium Access
Special Reports
Exercise
Vitamins
Skin Care
Stress Management
Foot Care
See All Titles
Books
Your Developing Baby
The Fertility Diet
Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy
Beating Diabetes
The Harvard Medical School Family Health Guide
See All Titles
Browse
Common Medical Conditions
Wellness & Prevention
Emotional Well Being & Mental Health
Women’s Health
Men’s Health
Heart & Circulatory Health
Tools
Guide to Diagnostic Tests