Helping you feel better, sooner.
Pharmacogenetic Testing
Precision medication chosen with your biology in mind.
Pharmacogenetic testing is a simple cheek swab that tells us how your body processes psychiatric medications — and how your brain is wired to respond to them. With that information, we can choose what's most likely to help, with fewer side effects, and less of the trial-and-error that can wear you down.
It is one of the ways we deliver on the promise at the heart of our practice: holistic psychiatry that meets you where you are.
If you ever felt like you were the experiment, this is for you.
In traditional psychiatry, finding the right medication often means trying one, waiting weeks, adjusting the dose, and trying another if it doesn't work — sometimes for months or years.
Pharmacogenetic testing gives us a head start by looking at the genes that shape how you process and respond to psychiatric medications.
It's not a crystal ball, and it doesn't replace clinical judgment. But for the right patient, it can be the difference between another year of trial and error and finally feeling like yourself again.
What should I expect?
Pharmacogenetic testing analyzes specific genes that influence how psychiatric medications work for you.
The most clinically useful panels look at two distinct categories of genes, and both matter.
Pharmacokinetic genes
How your body processes the medication.
Pharmacodynamic genes
How your brain responds to the medication.
For the holistic, root-cause work we do at Present Life Psychiatry, the pharmacodynamic side is often the most useful — those genes open doors to nutrition, targeted supplementation, and lifestyle strategies that support how your brain wants to function.
How it Works
A cheek swab. A short wait. A clearer path forward.
The test itself is simple:
• A painless cheek swab — mailed to your home
• Sent to a CLIA-certified lab for analysis
• Results back to your clinician in roughly 2 weeks
• Reviewed together at your next appointment, with a personalized treatment plan in plain language
Pharmacogenetic testing is especially valuable if…
You've tried medications that didn't work — or didn't work for long.
You've had unusual or intolerable side effects.
You're anxious about starting medication and want more certainty and precision.
You're a parent of a child or teen starting psychiatric care and want to feel more confident in treatment options.
Honest Expectations
Pharmacogenetic testing can't tell us with certainty which medication will work. Pharmacokinetic genes are highly predictive for how you'll process medications; pharmacodynamic genes are more probabilistic — they point to tendencies, not guarantees. Both are most useful inside a careful clinical conversation, not outside of one.
What testing can do is shorten the road. For the right patient, that's significant.
Pharmacogenetic Testing FAQs
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No. Pharmacogenetic testing only looks at genes that affect how psychiatric medications are processed and how your brain responds to them. It does not predict your risk of any disease, and it does not test your DNA for ancestry or disease genes.
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A clinically useful psychiatric panel includes both pharmacokinetic genes (the CYP450 enzymes — CYP2D6, CYP2C19, CYP3A4, and others — which determine how you metabolize medications) and pharmacodynamic genes (such as SLC6A4, HTR2A, COMT, MTHFR, BDNF, DRD2, and ADRA2A) that influence how your brain actually responds to those medications. The pharmacodynamic side is often where the richest, most personalized information lives — and where it intersects with the holistic, root-cause work we do.
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Pharmacokinetic genes affect what your body does to the medication — how fast you break it down, how much actually reaches your bloodstream. Pharmacodynamic genes affect what the medication does to your body — how your receptors, transporters, and neurotransmitter pathways respond. Both shape your experience of a medication, and the most informative panels include both.
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Genomind is covered by Medicaid. Some commercial plans cover or partially cover pharmacogenetic testing, particularly when there's documented history of medication trials that haven't worked. Coverage varies. Our team will review your specific plan and discuss costs with you before testing is ordered.
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Yes. Results are protected health information under HIPAA and stored in your medical record. Your sample is destroyed after analysis and is not used for any purpose other than your care.
Curious whether pharmacogenetic testing is right for you?
Schedule an intake with one of our clinicians and we'll talk through whether testing makes sense for you. New patients are typically seen within a week!
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