
New home test can detect cancer — thanks to puppies who sniff it out
You've probably heard that dogs can be trained to sniff out cancer.
Now, Israeli startup SpotItEarly is harnessing that remarkable ability — along with groundbreaking technology — to launch medicine's next secret weapon.
5 SpotItEarly is developing a revolutionary at-home cancer screening test that's part pup, part AI.
Courtesy of SpotitEarly Inc
The biotech company is developing a revolutionary at-home cancer screening test that's part pup, part AI.
Here's how it works: You order a test that arrives at your door, breathe into a high-tech mask that resembles an N95 for three minutes and mail the sample to SpotItEarly's lab.
There, a team of professionally trained dogs will give it a good sniff — and if there's any cancer present, they'll know.
'Our dogs are natural workers and love being mentally stimulated by their sense of smell. Training them to detect odors wasn't a challenge; it is in their nature,' Shlomi Madar, CEO of SpotitEarly, told The Post.
'With around 250-300 million receptors, a dog's sense of smell is estimated to be between 10,000 to 100,000 times more sensitive than a human's. That is what makes them highly effective for scent-based tasks, such as those in police forces or for detecting diseases in humans.'
5 These good boys will give your sample a good sniff — and if there's any cancer present, they'll know.
Courtesy of SpotitEarly Inc
According to Madar, the dogs make their diagnosis by detecting cancer odor signatures in a patient's volatile organic compounds (VOCs) — biological information from the blood in our lungs that travels into the air we exhale.
As incredible as these pup-fessional super-sniffers are, the real magic happens when canine intelligence meets artificial intelligence.
'As the detection dogs are sniffing the samples in the lab, we use our proprietary AI platform, LUCID, to track and analyze their physiological and behavioral signals, collecting thousands of data points per second,' Madar explained.
'LUCID will generate a positive lab result if a cancer signature is identified in a sample. This fusion of advanced technology with the extraordinary olfactory abilities of canines enables each sample to be screened in a fraction of a second, making the solution highly scalable.'
5 As incredible as these pup-fessional super-sniffers are, the real magic happens when canine intelligence meets artificial intelligence.
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
The goal is to spot cancers earlier, when they're easier and cheaper to treat.
'Too often, cancer diagnoses come too late,' Madar said. 'Our goal is to reduce late-stage and potentially fatal cancer diagnoses. The data is clear: when we detect cancer earlier, we significantly improve survival rates and outcomes.'
The test, which is in late-stage development, is expected to hit the market in 2026 with an estimated price tag of $250.
That's per cancer type, with bundled discounts for multi-cancer screenings.
'We plan to work with health insurers to cover the test to reduce the financial burden on patients,' he said. 'Once it becomes commercially available, this will be a high priority for us.'
In a recent clinical study, SpotItEarly's cancer-screening method clocked a 94% accuracy.
5 'Too often, cancer diagnoses come too late,' Shlomi Madar, CEO of SpotitEarly, told The Post.
Getty Images
If it works, it may save you a trip to the doctor and an unpleasant procedure.
'Many individuals avoid routine cancer screenings because they can be uncomfortable and invasive,' Madar said.
'By simplifying the process to a self-administered screening test where users just breathe into a mask, [this] levels that barrier and encourages more proactive testing.'
Research has found that only 14% of cancers in the US are diagnosed by a traditional screening test.
While SpotItEarly is not looking to replace them, Madar said he does want to 'improve the cancer diagnosis and treatment ecosystem, shifting it from sick care to true health care.'
Now — back to the dogs.
5 'Our dogs are not lab animals; they're truly a part of the SpotItEarly team,' he said.
Courtesy of SpotitEarly Inc
The pups work a few hours a day in teams and they're rewarded with treats and love.
When they're off the clock, they get outdoor playtime, belly rubs and plenty of human attention.
And when they retire? They're adopted into loving homes — often by the very people who worked with them.
'Our dogs are not lab animals; they're truly a part of the SpotItEarly team,' Madar said.
And while cancer is the priority for now — especially as it's mysteriously on the rise in younger people — Madar believes the tech could one day help sniff out other diseases too, including Parkinson's and serious infections.
'We aim to make early diagnosis the norm, consequently increasing the chances of survival at scale,' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Disney Expands Product and Tech Leadership Team With Tony Donohoe, Erin Teague
Disney Entertainment and ESPN's chief product & technology officer Adam Smith is expanding his leadership team, adding former JPMorgan Chase and Walmart executive Tony Donohoe and former Google executive Erin Teague. Donohoe, who brings over 30 years of experience scaling technology across the retail, financial services, travel and enterprise software industries, will serve as executive vice president of ad platforms, working closely with Disney Advertising chief Rita Ferro on growth and innovation for the division. He most recently served as senior vice president of technology at Walmart, where he led a global team of over 4,500 technologists, managed cloud infrastructure spend for commerce platforms and launched their in-house digital service provider (DSP). Additionally, he held technology leadership roles at JP Morgan Chase and was chief technology officer for Expedia and SoFi. More from TheWrap Disney Expands Product and Tech Leadership Team With Tony Donohoe, Erin Teague Shari Redstone Speaks Out on Selling Paramount, Settling With Trump: 'I Wanted Out' 'We Will Dance Again' Director Yariv Mozer Sets First-Look Deal With Israeli Studio Sipur Nexstar to Acquire Tegna in $6.2 Billion Local TV Deal, Citing Trump-Backed Initiatives Meanwhile, Teague will serve as executive vice president of product management, overseeing a team that will focus on building user-centric products across a variety of areas such as artificial intelligence, sports, media and entertainment, social media and augmented and virtual reality. She's previously held leadership roles at Google, Yahoo, Twitter and Morgan Stanley, among others, and will officially join the company in September. 'Part of what makes Disney distinctive is the combination of creativity and technology. As Product & Technology at Disney and ESPN continue to pursue our vision, we're driving new ideas, transforming our products,' Smith said in a statement. 'Erin and Tony bring technical firepower, deep expertise and dynamic vision and will be a key part of our success driving innovation and user-centric products.' The executive appointments come as ESPN is gearing up to launch its new streaming service on Thursday, which will package the sports network's programming with fantasy sports integrations, enhanced statistics, betting features and e-commerce. Disney also recently revealed that it plans to fully integrate Hulu into Disney+, with plans for a unified standalone app to launch in 2026. As part of the integration, Hulu will replace the Star tile on Disney+ in international markets starting in the fall. Work is also underway to make various technical improvements in the Disney+ app, including new features and a more personalized home page, as it looks to boost engagement on the platform. As of its third quarter of 2025, Disney has a total of 207.4 million subscribers across Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+. Disney+ and Hulu will also stop reporting subscriber and average revenue per user figures starting in the first quarter of fiscal 2026, while ESPN+ will stop in the fiscal fourth quarter of 2025. The post Disney Expands Product and Tech Leadership Team With Tony Donohoe, Erin Teague appeared first on TheWrap.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Microsoft Workers Protesting Israel Ties Say They've Occupied HQ
(Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp. employees have started setting up a protest encampment at the company's Redmond, Washington, headquarters, ratcheting up a campaign calling for company to stop doing business with Israel over its war in Gaza. Why New York City Has a Fleet of New EVs From a Dead Carmaker Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone A Photographer's Pipe Dream: Capturing New York's Vast Water System A London Apartment Tower With Echoes of Victorian Rail and Ancient Rome Trump Takes Second Swing at Cutting Housing Assistance for Immigrants Protesters started gathering Tuesday afternoon at a plaza at the center of a recently redeveloped portion of the company's main campus, which extends over about 500 acres in the suburban town east of Seattle. They circulated a 3,300-word declaration outlining their aims and invited Microsoft executives to come to the negotiating table. A Microsoft employee group, No Azure for Apartheid, has for more than a year been pushing Microsoft to end its relationship with Israel, saying use of the company's products is contributing to civilian deaths in Gaza. Azure, the company's cloud-computing division, sells on-demand software and data storage to businesses and governments, including Israeli government and military agencies. A handful of No Azure for Apartheid organizers have been fired, for holding what Microsoft said was an unauthorized event on campus and disrupting speeches by executives. 'Microsoft is the most complicit digital arms manufacturer in Israel's genocide of Gaza,' Nisreen Jaradat, a Microsoft employee, said in a statement on Tuesday. Microsoft in a blog post published in May said it had 'found no evidence to date that Microsoft's Azure and AI technologies have been used to target or harm people in the conflict in Gaza.' But the company said this month that it had enlisted the law firm Covington & Burling to conduct a further review after a report that Israel's military surveillance agency intercepted millions of mobile phone calls made by Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank and stored them on Azure servers. That trove helped inform the selection of bombing targets in Gaza, according to reporting by the Guardian newspaper, Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine, and Local Call, a Hebrew-language news site. The activists took their inspiration from encampment-style protests staged on at least 100 US college campuses since the war in Gaza began. Students at schools like Columbia University pitched tents and called for their colleges to divest financial holdings tied to Israel and US weapons makers, in many cases sparking disciplinary action from administrators. Foreigners Are Buying US Homes Again While Americans Get Sidelined What Declining Cardboard Box Sales Tell Us About the US Economy Women's Earnings Never Really Recover After They Have Children Americans Are Getting Priced Out of Homeownership at Record Rates Yosemite Employee Fired After Flying Trans Pride Flag ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

5 hours ago
Death toll rises in Gaza as Hamas signals progress in ceasefire talks
At least 60 people are dead and more than 340 others were treated for injuries related to the Israeli military action across Gaza in the past 24 hours, the Gaza Health Ministry said Tuesday.