What I did a while back is download the raw data and run it through https://promethease.com/. Will tell you a lot more about risks, drug interactions. What it does is it compares your data to that of all the journal papers and research around that gene. Interestingly I have a SNP that is correlated with lack of empathy and another one that is the "warrior" gene. The BRCA SNPs would be identified.
I'd urge you to be cautious when interpreting those data. The effect size of most of these SNPs is tiny, often explaining (at most) only very small amounts of the variability observed between groups. This is especially true for things like personality traits, which have a huge environmental component.
So, if finding out the empathy thing is fun, then by all means, keep poking around in your data! Promethease is probably the best of the bunch, and I've run my data through it. Just be mindful of the evidence level and effect size!
Yes, this is a good note for anyone interested in doing this. Other things to keep in mind, the paper source, while may be peer reviewed, most likely was not reproduced (a problem in the industry in general), so would be prudent to filter on # of publications supporting the SNP correlation. Also, the report will tell you relative risk, not absolute (e.g. 1.5x increased risk of getting breast cancer). In other words, your absolute risk may be 0.00001, so it can easily be 8x and it won't really matter. The most actionable items I've found for me personally were drug interactions due to genetics. Thanks for bringing up the caveats.
l'll second that, drug drug interactions and genetics is an under learned topic in the UK, I know that because my GP borrowed my book, 'Clinical Manual of Drug Interaction Principles for Medical Practice' :)