Mendelspod
Mendelspod Podcast
Rapid Answers for Rare Disease: Katherine Stueland on GeneDx’s Mission
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Rapid Answers for Rare Disease: Katherine Stueland on GeneDx’s Mission

In a time when many diagnostics companies are struggling, GeneDx is thriving by focusing squarely on solving one of medicine’s most pressing problems: the diagnostic odyssey for rare disease. CEO Katherine Stueland explains why the company has committed to whole exome and genome testing as first-line answers for children, and how their recent acquisition of Fabric Genomics expands their reach into AI-powered interpretation services.

  • 0:00 Success coming from a focus on rare disease

  • 5:20 Why whole genome testing?

  • 13:30 “No margin, no mission”

  • 15:50 Acquiring Fabric Genomics

  • 26:10 Bullish on healthy newborn screening

“We’ve been focused on solving the fact that it still takes, on average, five years for a child with a rare genetic disease to get a genetic test and an accurate diagnosis. That’s something we can now provide within weeks, if not days, if not 48 hours.”

On newborn screening, Stueland points to the GUARDIAN study at Columbia as a model: “What we’ve been able to find is a diagnosis in 3.2% of these otherwise healthy newborns. And the average age of diagnosis for those same conditions, in GeneDx’s 25-year history, had been 7 to 11 years. We’re now able to find them at birth.”

From shortening the time to diagnosis to embedding genetic testing in general pediatrics, GeneDx is showing what it looks like to deliver on the promise of genomics in everyday medicine.

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