AI Limitations

Last updated: February 2026

AI outputs depend on the quality and completeness of the information provided. Enhanced Genetics AI is informational and non-diagnostic.

1) Lab reference ranges vary

Different labs may use different methods and reference ranges. An "out of range" value may not mean the same thing across providers. Whenever possible, interpret results using the reference range shown on your specific report and discuss questions with a licensed clinician.

2) Missing context can change interpretation

Lab values often require clinical context (history, symptoms, medications, timing, hydration status, training load, and more). The AI may not have that context unless you provide it, which can reduce accuracy or completeness.

3) Data quality and extraction limits

  • Uploaded documents can be incomplete, inconsistent, or formatted in ways that are difficult to extract reliably.
  • Some results may be missing units, reference ranges, or key metadata.
  • Typos or transcription errors can materially change interpretations.

For how the AI handles inputs, see AI Methodology and AI Data Sources.

4) AI uncertainty

AI can make mistakes or produce incomplete summaries, especially when results are ambiguous or the input is missing context. Outputs should be treated as informational only and not medical advice.

5) When to seek medical care

If you have symptoms that feel urgent, severe, or concerning, contact a licensed clinician or emergency services. Do not rely on AI-generated summaries for emergency decision-making.

For responsible use guidance, see AI Safety.

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