Rite Aid adds prescription analysis to genetic test lineup

Rite Aid adds prescription analysis to genetic test lineup
This Dec. 14, 2011, file photo, shows a Rite Aid sign at a store in Woodmere, Ohio. Rite Aid is giving patients a chance to peek over their doctor's shoulder with genetic tests that help determine the effectiveness of some prescriptions. The drugstore chain said Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015 that it is selling Harmonyx testing kits at nearly all of its stores. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)

Rite Aid is giving patients a chance to peek over their doctor's shoulder with genetic tests that help determine the effectiveness of some prescriptions.

The drugstore chain said Thursday that it is selling Harmonyx testing kits at nearly all of its stores. The kits cost between $49 and $89 without a prescription, and customers can use them to learn more about the effectiveness of medicines for cardiac conditions, cholesterol and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

The kits delve into a growing area of medical care, with doctors using genetic analysis more in specialties like cardiology and oncology to make sure that what they prescribe is a good fit for their patients. The kits also broaden the array of self-administered patient tests that drugstores have offered for years, a portfolio that can include tests for pregnancy, drugs and paternity.

But tests that explore a drug's effectiveness are more complex than those that just detect pregnancy hormones. Genetic counselor Joy Larsen Haidle says patients should talk to their doctor before buying a kit.

"If your doctor feels you should be on a medication, he should be part of the decision-making process," said Larsen Haidle, president of the National Society of Genetic Counselors. "Your doctor ordered the medicine for a reason and a specific dose."

She also recommends that all genetic test customers find out before buying a test what will happen with their leftover sample after a company does the analysis. It may be discarded or it might be sold for research.

Customers who buy these kits swab their cheek to get a genetic sample and then send that to Harmonyx. The company then delivers results to the patient, his or her physician and the drugstore pharmacist.

Genetic testing can tell whether a patient might metabolize a medicine quickly and needs a dose adjustment. In cancer treatment, it also can offer insight into which drugs may be most effective against a particular tumor.

These tests can yield good information, Larsen Haidle said. But she noted that testing done through a doctor will be covered by health insurance, while patients pay the full price of a kit bought at a drugstore without a prescription.

Rite Aid Corp., which is being acquired by rival drugstore chain Walgreens, decided to sell the Harmonyx tests as part of its broader push to help customers "live and stay well," spokeswoman Ashley Flower said in an email.

That reflects a trend in the industry. Drugstores have been focusing more on customer health for years in part to appeal to aging baby boomers and the growing number of people who are shopping around more for health care instead of simply visiting their family doctors.

Camp Hill, Pennsylvania-based Rite Aid is selling the Harmonyx tests at nearly 4,000 locations. State law prevents the company from selling them in its New York drugstores.

© 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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