Amway Corp. is joining a growing list of large employers adopting genetic testing as a workplace benefit.
Starting in January, the multilevel marketing giant will offer genetic testing by Interleukin Genetics Inc., a Waltham, Massachusetts, developer of genetic tests for chronic inflammatory diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and arthritis. Using a cheek swab, Interleukinâs ILUSTRA genetic risk test, previously called PerioPredict, can detect a personâs tolerance of inflammation levels, said Interleukin CEO Mark Carbeau. Proper dental care can lower inflammation levels, which affect other areas of health, like risk of diabetes, heart disease and stroke, he said.
âInflammatory burden systemically is created by bacteria in your gums, so the notion is if we clean up your mouth, we can cool down a large source of chronic inflammation and that allows the body to control and manage those other sources more effectively,â Carbeau said.
Amway joins the likes of Visa Inc. and insurer Aetna Inc. to introduce genetic testing for employees. Visa is offering genetic testing for breast and ovarian cancer, while Aetna implemented a pilot program testing employees at risk for heart disease, stroke and diabetes. Companies including venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz and online survey company SurveyMonkey also are using genetic testing among their employee population.
Genetic testing in the workplace presents legal hurdles that could limit wider use, said Seth Perretta, partner with Groom Law in Washington, D.C.
Companies canât require employees to take a medical exam under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Under the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, or GINA, a federal law protecting people from genetic discrimination in health care and employment, employers canât tie a financial incentive to the completion of a genetic testing program.
âOffering genetic testing outside a major medical plan would be rife with legal risk for the employer,â said Perretta. âIt would almost certainly have to be structured as part of the major med plan or limited to folks enrolled in an employer-sponsored med plan. And it would have to be fully voluntary.â
Still, thereâs value to it, Perretta added. âBut for some reason Congress has clearly spoken that from a policy perspective, theyâd rather have the ailment manifest itself prior to an employer getting involved.â
There are also privacy concerns. It can feel like a step down the path of the employer getting too involved in the personal lives of its employees, said Jim Winkler, Aon Hewittâs global health innovation leader. Employees need to know that their employers wonât have access to the data, and employers have to communicate that effectively, he said.
Interleukinâs program is a voluntary benefit that is covered by GINA. Interleukin explains to the employer the testâs purpose and how it would be used, but only provides the genetic information to the employeeâs individual dentist.
Amway chose to offer this in their group health plan to encourage employees to expand their awareness of their personal health risks and the various resources available to them, said Tom Boehr, manager of corporate wellness and employee engagement at Amway, in an email.

âThe offering is another form of education that Amway is introducing to its employees in order to further empower them to make health care choices that are in their best interest,â Boehr said.
Genetic testing is still new in the benefits space, but Winkler believes that, like âmany things in our lives that are technology enabled, there is probably an element of inevitability to this. Itâs just a question of, âIs it in the next year? The next five years? The next 20 years?â â he said.
The technology involved and the equipment used are becoming more efficient and less expensive. Ten years ago, the costs to isolate specific attributes of DNA was in the tens of thousands of dollars, and today itâs in the hundreds of dollars, Winkler said. Possibly, as genetic testing solutions become less expensive, consumers may become more interested, at which point employers wouldnât even necessarily have to offer the benefit.
He compared it to Fitbits and other wearable devices. Five years ago, the only people who used them were the ones who got them from their employer. Now, they have a huge commercial market.
âYou could start to see this in the genetic testing space as well â over what period of time, I donât know,â he said.