deCODE You

Your Ancestry, Health and Genetic Testing

Archive for the ‘Customer Stories’ Category

How a deCODEme genetic test helped a heart patient fight prostate cancer

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Charles "Chuck" Wallace and his wife believe that a deCODEme Complete Scan helped save Chuck's life

Charles Wallace and his wife believe that a deCODEme Complete Scan helped save Chuck's life when it lead to discovering Prostate Cancer. Click on the picture to see Chuck's story.

Dr. Bradley Bale at the the Heart Attack & Stroke Prevention Center is a big believer in deCODE’s tests for genetic risk factors for cardiovascular disease. As he has for many of his patients, Dr. Bale recommended that Charles Wallace, a 55 year-old Texan, have a full deCODEme scan to understand his risk of a range of conditions, including cardiovascular diseases. The breadth of the risk factors analyzed by deCODEme proved to be very important indeed. Mr. Wallace learned that he was at nearly double the average risk of prostate cancer, a piece of information he and Bale followed up on and that Wallace credits with helping to save his life.

Written by admin

June 9th, 2009 at 6:31 pm

The gift of knowledge – Prevention starts with knowing the odds

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Prevention Starts with Knowing the Odds. That's the opinion of 27 year old Canadian grad student who is especially concerned about Breast Cancer and she has her reasons. She decided to learn how to use the GAIL model to calculate her risk.

On top of Acropolis on a camping trip in Athens.

By: Anna Peterson
I am a fit, healthy, 27 year old Canadian graduate student looking forward to the future. So why, you might wonder, did I decide to take the deCODEme genetic test? It’s simple really. Information is the key to prevention. By learning about my genetic predisposition for different illnesses, I will be better prepared to take an active role in my future health care decisions.
Many of my friends were surprised that I decided to take this comprehensive genetic test. Some were curious about the story my genes would tell, while others wondered whether or not I really wanted to know. When I put my genetic sample in the mail, I felt a little nervous about the chain of events I had set in motion, but curiosity overcame fear. In my opinion, knowledge is power and I’d rather make lifestyle changes in my 20s than in my 60s.

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Written by admin

December 24th, 2008 at 3:51 pm

Genetic test as a Christmas present

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Pam Bale is going to get her three grown-up children a deCODEme genetic test for Christmas

Pam Bale is going to get her three grown-up children a deCODEme genetic test for Christmas

Pam Bale knows what she wants to get her three children for Christmas. Two of Pam’s children are in their 20s and the other is 30. In other words, a little too old for video games. So they’re not getting a Wii or Guitar Hero. Instead, Pam wants to surprise her kids on December 25th with a genetic test.

“I think the kit would open up all sorts of doors to their future,” says Pam. “They are young adults, and at their ages the test can show them what medical concerns they might face down the road. They are young enough so they can take the steps to avoid those concerns. It would make their whole future happier and healthier and extend their lives. I think it’s a great gift to give to my kids. So don’t tell them. I don’t want to ruin the surprise.”

For the whole interview with Pam Bale go to deCODEme Customer Stories.

Written by admin

November 21st, 2008 at 3:03 pm

Pam sees DNA test as a gift

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genetic test customer Pamela Ayers and her grand-children, Spokane, WA

Genetic test customer Pamela Ayers and her grand-children, Spokane, WA

After watching her parents and brother suffer with diseases that might have been prevented with the right care, Pam Ayers has become vehemently proactive. She now believes that genetic health scans are the way of the future and early testing could help parents change their own and their children’s life-style for the better. This proud grandmother is taking care of her family.

Read the whole interview with Pamela Ayers in the Customer Stories section of deCODEme.

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November 4th, 2008 at 4:04 pm

Heart attack and stroke prevention: measuring lifetime risk

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Amy Doneen, Director of the Heart Attack & Stroke Prevention Center, Spokane, WA.

Amy Doneen, Director of the Heart Attack & Stroke Prevention Center, Spokane, WA.

Amy Doneen at the Heart Attack and Stroke Prevention Clinic in Spokane, Washington, talks about an “exciting new time” for preventive health care. Amy, a nurse practitioner, has been using nutrigenomics (the response of genes to nutrition) as part of the program for more than a decade and with outstanding results. “The goal,” says Amy “is to find out what path a patient is on to developing certain diseases and kick them off that path.” Scanning for risk factor for common conditions (such as diabetes, heart attack, several types of cancer etc.) She emphasizes the importance of gauging lifetime risk as against clinical tests that usually concentrate on immediate high risk. According to Amy, some people walk away from the second kind with a negative result and think things are always going to be fine. Genetic testing is just arriving to the market place, but Americans currently spending nearly $50 billion on stroke care alone, the time is ripe to back all advances in preventive medicine.

To read more and watch parts of the interview with Amy Doneen visit the deCODEme Customer Stories.

Written by admin

October 20th, 2008 at 2:43 pm

Genetic test was an investment in myself

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Jack Doughery says deCODEme genetic test was an investment

Jack Doughery says deCODEme genetic test was an investment

Jack Doughery feels great and wants everyone to know it.

“I almost feel evangelical about my health,” says the 62-year-old businessman from Spokane, Washington. “I’m so excited about what can happen if you do the right things and have the right tools.”

Jack started doing the right things once he began what he calls his journey, which kicked off one day after waking up at three in the morning craving a cigarette.

“When you’re waking up at three in the morning, coughing and spluttering, and the only way to calm down is by smoking a cigarette, you don’t have to be too smart to know this might not be the way to go. It got my attention,” he remembers.

One of Jack’s first stops along his grand trip was at Spokane’s Heart Attack and Stroke Prevention Clinic, run by nurse practitioner Amy Doneen. It was Doneen and Dr. Bradley Bale who put Jack on the path to prevention, helping Jack to reshape his life using diagnostic testing, nutrition and exercise.

Recently, Amy Doneen began using a new test to help alter Jack’s journey—deCODEme, a genetic test that scans a patient’s genome for markers relating to 30 various diseases. The deCODEme genetic test gauges a patient’s average and lifetime risk of developing diseases such as Alzheimer’s, heart attack, prostate cancer, and most recently bladder cancer.

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Written by Edward Weinman

October 3rd, 2008 at 6:33 pm

A hypocondriac meets deCODEme and comes out eating apples

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A hypocondriac meets deCODEme and comes out eating apples, by Edward Weinman

By Edward Weinman

With a simple swab from the inside of your cheek, deCODE genetics can scan your DNA, map your markers and assess your risk of developing 29 common diseases. Edward Weinman, self-described hypochondriac, wonders if he should look too closely at his possible future.

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Written by Edward Weinman

September 2nd, 2008 at 4:53 pm

How much did Boonsri Dickinson learn from her home DNA test?

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Science journalist Boonsri Dickinson

Science journalist Boonsri Dickinson

Discover magazine reporter Boonsri Dickinson recently tried out deCODEme, as well as two other genetic scans offered by California-based websites. She discusses her results, and talks to several people who question whether genetic scans should be available to the public. Dickinson seems to be happy she had the chance to take a look at her genome, and went over her results with deCODE CEO Kari Stefansson. She notes that as “deCODE is known for discovering genetic risk factors…I decided to use deCODEme to validate the other two,” concluding that “deCODE genetics was authoritative.” Her article, ‘Inside Out: A DNA Diary,’ appeared on newsstands in August and can be found on the Discovermagazine.com website.

Written by Edward Farmer

August 22nd, 2008 at 3:32 pm

Early warning was a blessing

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 Lauralee Nygaard says the deCODE tests are easy to take and highly cost effective but that we have to pay close attention to the results and be prepared to make some serious lifestyle changes.

Lauralee Nygaard, a periodontist from Spokane, WA, says the deCODE tests are easy to take and highly cost effective but that we have to pay close attention to the results and be prepared to make some serious lifestyle changes.

Lauralee Nygaard is a dentist from Spokane, Washington. She is in her early forties and has two young children. Three years ago Lauralee had a stroke while she was performing surgery on a patient. It confirmed her suspicions about a predisposition to heart disease that she had nurtured since she was 18.

“When I was 18, I went to the doctor and said, ‘I know I’m at risk for a heart attack, my dad has hypercholesterolemia.’ The doctor laughed at me. He said, ‘you’re a skinny girl, you’re never going to have heart disease.”

A stroke at forty confirmed her worst fears: “It corroborated the fact that I knew I was at risk. I had pushed my family physician for years to be aggressively preventative with making sure I didn’t have heart disease. He always told me there was nothing they could do.”

As a dentist who had stressed the importance of preventative care for years, Lauralee was ready to practice what she had preached

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Genetic test helps to detect prostate cancer

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Jeff Gulcher, Chief Scientific Officer of deCODE genetics, creator of the deCODEme test.

Chief scientific officer of deCODE, Jeff Gulcher (48) takes a deCODEme scan that indicates he has a very high risk bracket for prostate cancer. Taking his results to a urologist may have saved his life.

Rick Weiss of the Washington Post reports:

Jeffrey Gulcher had no reason to think much about prostate cancer. He was just 48, and the disease typically strikes later in life. Even the most cautious medical groups agree that most men need not begin annual prostate screenings until age 50.

But Gulcher happens to be the chief scientific officer of deCODE Genetics — one of several companies that, amid some controversy, have begun offering direct-to-consumer DNA tests that can help people predict which diseases they are likely to get. So in April, he spat into a test tube and, without giving the matter much thought, sent the sample in for analysis by his own company.

He was in for a shock.

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Written by Jonheidur Isleifsdottir

July 25th, 2008 at 4:23 pm

I Want to Live Longer and Better

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Jack Grayson deCODEme genetic test customer, Houston, Texas

A maverick businessman and former White House confidant believes that by collecting enough data about his health, he can live to be ripe, old age.

Jack Grayson wants to live to be 113. Actually, the former head of the U.S. Price Commission under the late President Richard Nixon thinks he might be able to reach 150.

“I want to live longer so I can live forever,” says Dr. Grayson, who now runs the highly successful APQC, a private sector, non-profit organization to help American business, health and education sectors improve productivity and remain globally competitive.

How does the former FBI agent and farmer who taught at both Stanford and Harvard plan to live for a century and a half?

Link: Read the whole interview and listen to Jack Grayson talk about his deCODEme experience

Written by admin

July 4th, 2008 at 3:45 pm

Lottery Winner Isn’t Gambling With Her Health

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Cheryl Click deCODEme genetic test customer, Lubbock, Texas

After years of reading meters for the electric company, Cheryl Click won the Texas lottery, retired and purchased a cattle ranch. Now financially secure, Ms. Click is no longer rolling the dice with her health.

By Edward Weinman

Cheryl Click is rich beyond her wildest dreams. In the 1990s, she won the
Texas lottery, pocketing upwards of $27 million. After quitting her job at the electric company, this Texan with a glowing smile cashed in on her dreams and now owns various cattle ranches.

Knowing that her family had a history of heart disease, and wanting to stick around long enough to enjoy her horses and cattle, Ms. Click turned to deCODE genetics for help deciphering what role genetics play in her family’s medical history.

“All my immediate family is gone,” Ms. Click says in her thick Texas drawl. “They died from heart problems. My sister had open-heart surgery, but her heart wasn’t strong enough to support her surgery. My brother had asthma all his life, but his heart quit on him one day. And my mother died of a stroke.”

Link: Read the rest of Cheryl Click’s interview

Written by Keith Hayward

July 3rd, 2008 at 4:56 pm