Few fields in medicine have undergone as much change in recent decades as the field of medical genetics. Following completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003,1 the field has entirely transformed from one with few testing options used by a limited number of practitioners to a field in which the number of available tests is growing at an exponential rate. An analysis in 2018 documented around 75,000 genetic tests on the market, with about 10 new tests being added daily.2
Rasmussen et al. (Tue,) studied this question.