advertising
print page Print  email page Email 


Other Articles

Courting China

A Washingtonian helps spread hoop dreams abroad


Bookend

Flip: How to Turn Everything You Know on Its Head -- and Succeed Beyond Your Wildest Imaginings

By...


Planned, Zoned & Ready

Industrial developers find the welcome mat out in Frederickson as urban land becomes scarcer


The Landscape Artist

Cascade land conservancy's Gene Duvernoy focuses on practical solutions to preserve land


Ceo Scene

Important Faces in the Crowd Around the State


The Big Bio Gamble

Dendreon's stock woes may have been unpredictable, but biotech firms often face steep odds.


Win Place, or No-Show

Horse raising becomes less cost-effective in an economic downturn


Have Steak Will Sizzle

Even as the economy trends downward, restauranteurs bet our hunger for red meat will grow


A wash in Wine

Washington now ranks as a world player in the wine industry


Insurance for Genetic Tests

Genetic tests already exist to help determine the possibility that a patient might get a certain disease. Insurers cover some genetic tests but not all. How do they decide?

"Regence ... will cover any test that is demonstrated to improve the health of its members," says Dr. Joseph Gifford, senior medical director of Regence Blue Shield. For example, some women with advanced metastatic breast cancer have a gene called HER-2. Testing can identify who carries this gene and who doesn't. Physicians sometimes prescribe a drug called Herceptin, which costs $25,000 a year.

"If you have the HER-2 gene, as 25 percent of women do, Herceptin is very effective," Gifford explains. "If you do not have the HER-2 gene, you're wasting your money and [then must endure] the side effects." Most insurers cover the HER-2 test, because it differentiates between patients who will benefit from treatment and those who will not.

Regence will not cover a genetic test unless there is good scientific evidence that the test results would lead to different treatments to produce the best health outcome for the patient. Even with that stringent test, Gifford says the industry is seeing a 20 percent annual increase in genetic testing. "It's really too soon to tell how P4 Medicine is going to work in the world of insurance," Gifford says.

"Regence ... will cover any test that is demonstrated to improve the health of its members," says Dr. Joseph Gifford, senior medical director of Regence Blue Shield.

 

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention

advertising

© Washington CEO Magazine 2008