Cancer blood tests: Lab tests used in cancer diagnosis

Cancer blood tests may help your health care provider make a cancer diagnosis. Learn about cancer blood tests and how they're used.

By Mayo Clinic Staff

If your health care provider is worried you might have cancer, you might need more tests to be sure. Cancer blood tests are often part of this process.

Samples taken for cancer blood tests are tested in a lab for signs of cancer. When viewed under a microscope, the samples may show the actual cancer cells. Other blood tests might find proteins or other substances made by the cancer. Blood tests can also tell your provider how well your organs are working.

Most blood tests aren't used on their own to diagnose cancer. But they can provide clues that may lead your health care team to make the diagnosis. For most types of cancer, a procedure to remove a sample of cells for testing is often needed to be sure.

Some blood tests used to diagnose cancer include:

  • A test to count your blood cells. A complete blood count (CBC) measures the amount of each type of blood cell in a sample of your blood. Blood cancers may be found using this test.
  • A test that looks at the blood proteins. An electrophoresis blood test looks at the various proteins in your blood to find the ones made by your body's germ-fighting immune system. This test is helpful in diagnosing multiple myeloma.
  • Tests to find chemicals made by cancer cells. Tumor marker tests use a sample of blood to look for chemicals made by cancer cells.

    These tests don't always help with diagnosing cancer because many healthy cells also make these chemicals. And some conditions that aren't cancer can cause high levels of tumor markers. Instead, tumor marker tests are mostly used after your cancer diagnosis to see if treatment is working.

    Examples of tumor markers include prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for prostate cancer and cancer antigen 125 (CA 125) for ovarian cancer. Other examples include carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) for colon cancer and alpha-fetoprotein for testicular cancer.

  • Tests to look for cancer cells. Circulating tumor cell tests detect cancer cells in your blood. The cells might be in the blood if they've broken away from where they started and are spreading to other parts of the body. Circulating tumor cell tests are mostly used after a cancer diagnosis.

    Not every person with cancer needs a circulating tumor cell test. These tests are sometimes used for a few types of cancer, including breast cancer, colon cancer and prostate cancer. Researchers are looking at how these tests might help people with other types of cancer.

  • Tests to look for cancer cells' genetic material. These tests use a blood sample to look for small pieces of cancer cells' genetic material, called DNA. Healthy cells and cancer cells discard pieces or break apart as part of the natural process of growing and dying. These pieces of cells make their way into the blood so that the body can dispose of them. Special tests look for these cell pieces in a sample of blood.

    In people with cancer, these tests are sometimes used to understand the DNA changes present in the cancer cells. A health care provider uses the results to select the best treatment.

    One day providers might use these tests to detect signs of cancer in healthy people with no symptoms. This is an active area of research.

If your blood test shows a result that's not expected, you might need other tests and procedures to find the cause.

From Mayo Clinic to your inbox

Sign up for free and stay up to date on research advancements, health tips, current health topics, and expertise on managing health. Click here for an email preview.

We use the data you provide to deliver you the content you requested. To provide you with the most relevant and helpful information, we may combine your email and website data with other information we have about you. If you are a Mayo Clinic patient, we will only use your protected health information as outlined in our Notice of Privacy Practices. You may opt out of email communications at any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link in the email.

Dec. 05, 2024 See more In-depth

See also

  1. Health foods
  2. Adenocarcinoma: How this type of cancer affects prognosis
  3. Adjuvant therapy for cancer
  4. Alternative cancer treatments: 11 options to consider
  5. Atypical cells: Are they cancer?
  6. Biological therapy for cancer
  7. Biopsy procedures
  8. Blood Basics
  9. Bone marrow transplant
  10. Bone scan
  11. Cancer
  12. Cancer
  13. Myths about cancer causes
  14. Infographic: Cancer Clinical Trials Offer Many Benefits
  15. Cancer diagnosis: 11 tips for coping
  16. Cancer-related fatigue
  17. Cancer pain: Relief is possible
  18. Cancer-prevention strategies
  19. Cancer risk: What the numbers mean
  20. Cancer surgery
  21. Cancer survival rate
  22. Cancer survivors: Care for your body after treatment
  23. Cancer survivors: Late effects of cancer treatment
  24. Cancer survivors: Managing your emotions after cancer treatment
  25. Cancer survivorship program
  26. Cancer treatment
  27. Cancer treatment myths
  28. Cancer-related fatigue
  29. Cancer-related pain
  30. Cancer-related weakness
  31. CAR-T cell therapy
  32. Chemo targets
  33. Chemoembolization
  34. Chemotherapy
  35. Chemotherapy and hair loss: What to expect during treatment
  36. Chemotherapy and sex: Is sexual activity OK during treatment?
  37. Chemotherapy nausea and vomiting: Prevention is best defense
  38. Chemotherapy side effects: A cause of heart disease?
  39. Complete blood count (CBC)
  40. Cough
  41. CT scan
  42. Curcumin: Can it slow cancer growth?
  43. Cancer-related diarrhea
  44. Dysphagia
  45. Eating during cancer treatment: Tips to make food tastier
  46. Fatigue
  47. Fertility preservation
  48. Heart cancer: Is there such a thing?
  49. High-dose vitamin C: Can it kill cancer cells?
  50. Honey: An effective cough remedy?
  51. Hyperthermic isolated limb perfusion
  52. Immunotherapy
  53. Infographic: CAR-T Cell Therapy
  54. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT)
  55. Intrathecal chemotherapy
  56. Isolated limb infusion
  57. Joint pain
  58. Laryngitis
  59. Low blood counts
  60. Magic mouthwash
  61. Medical marijuana
  62. Microwave ablation for cancer
  63. Mindfulness exercises
  64. Minimally invasive cancer surgery
  65. Monoclonal antibody drugs
  66. Mort Crim and Cancer
  67. Mouth sores caused by cancer treatment: How to cope
  68. MRI
  69. Muscle pain
  70. Needle biopsy
  71. Night sweats
  72. No appetite? How to get nutrition during cancer treatment
  73. Palliative care
  74. PALS (Pets Are Loving Support)
  75. Pelvic exenteration
  76. PET/MRI scan
  77. Precision medicine for cancer
  78. Proton beam therapy
  79. Proton therapy
  80. Radiation therapy
  81. Regional perfusion therapy
  82. Seeing inside the heart with MRI
  83. Self-Image During Cancer
  84. Sentinel lymph node mapping
  85. Shortness of breath
  86. Sisters' Bone Marrow Transplant
  87. Sleep tips
  88. Small cell, large cell cancer: What this means
  89. Stem cells: What they are and what they do
  90. Stereotactic radiosurgery
  91. Surgical biopsy
  92. Targeted drug therapy
  93. Tumor vs. cyst: What's the difference?
  94. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte therapy (TIL therapy)
  95. TVEC (Talimogene laherparepvec) injection
  96. Ultrasound
  97. Unexplained weight loss
  98. Stem cell transplant
  99. How cancer spreads
  100. MRI
  101. PICC line placement
  102. When cancer returns: How to cope with cancer recurrence
  103. Wide local skin excision
  104. X-ray