Building Cancerguard and trusting it too
A look inside the people, the work, and the responsibility behind early cancer detection

Five years ago, before the Cancerguard® test ever reached patients, those at Abbott’s cancer diagnostics division spoke often about its promise, the possibility of detecting cancer earlier when treatment is most effective, even curative.
For Allison, that promise was the reason she joined the company.
After years working in professional services, she was looking for something different—something that meant something. When she learned about a Multi-Cancer Early Detection (MCED) test designed to detect multiple cancers from a single blood draw, she knew she wanted to be part of it.
She didn’t know it would end up changing her whole life.
As a communications leader in Abbott’s cancer diagnostics division, Allison joined the team responsible for introducing Cancerguard to the world, helping shape how it would be understood long before most people had ever heard of multi-cancer early detection, or MCED. For months, she lived inside the details, translating complex science into something people could understand.
Having worked so closely with the product, her knowledge of it turned into true belief.
“I believe that Cancerguard test will change the way we think of cancer and how it's diagnosed for the rest of our lives,” said Allison. “I think it's a complete game-changer.”
She had no obligation to take the test. But she cared deeply about what Cancerguard stood for, its promise, and its potential. So she requested the test as soon as it launched in 2025.
“I was anxious to take the Cancerguard test myself, so I truly understood what the experience was… I want to make sure I know firsthand what that experience is like.”
Her results were shocking.
“When I saw the positive Cancerguard test result, I felt like something within me exploded,” said Allison. “I was in disbelief, but at the same time, I believed. I knew the test had a really low false positive rate, and I was actually really happy it worked.”
A positive Cancerguard result means that the test identified a cancer signal in Allison’s blood. A follow-up CT scan revealed a 22-centimeter tumor on her right ovary.
“22 centimeters is big,” said Allison, “We're like talking about a football.”
Her oncologist explained it could be anything from a benign tumor to advanced cancer. She would need surgery to determine exactly what hand she’d been dealt.
The results, again, were unexpected.
The tumor was cancerous, but it was Stage 1 mucinous ovarian cancer. A rare diagnosis. And, critically, an early one.
“The complicated part about mucinous ovarian cancer is, it's resistant to chemotherapy,” said Allison. “When it's found beyond Stage 1, it's really hard to treat. The fact that mine was Stage 1, and they were able to remove it surgically, was really a miracle.”
Though she will need to continue to monitor and follow-up with her oncologist for the next few years, today, Allison is able to call herself cancer-free.
She has since dived right back into work with a renewed sense of purpose.
“When I went back to work, I thought, ‘I'm ready to get after it,’” said Allison. “I'm there, and we are going to let the world know about this test and the impact that it can have.”
“Because if I look back five years ago when I was talking to my friends and family about this test, it sounds like fake news, right? This isn't really going to happen. There's not going to be this test that is a single blood draw that's going to help detect more than 50 cancer types and subtypes. Come on. Well, it's real.”
