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Ovarian Cancer

OVA1 Test - Ovarian Cancer Biomarker Panel

OVA1 is a blood-based multibiomarker test that assesses the likelihood that an ovarian/adnexal mass is malignant to help clinicians decide on specialist referral and surgical planning. By improving early detection and appropriate referral, it can help reduce the risk of delayed ovarian cancer diagnosis and worse outcomes.

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Key Insights

  • Understand how this test reveals your body’s current biological state—specifically, whether an ovarian mass is more likely to be cancerous and whether a gynecologic oncologist should perform your surgery.
  • Identify a composite signal from five blood proteins (CA‑125, apolipoprotein A1, beta‑2 microglobulin, transferrin, and transthyretin) that can clarify the malignant potential of an adnexal mass before surgery.
  • Learn how biology and life stage—especially menopausal status—shape the score and the risk category used in clinical decision-making.
  • Use insights to guide personalized next steps with your clinician, including referral to a gynecologic oncologist and surgical planning that improves outcomes when cancer is present.
  • Track how your risk categorization changes across evaluations when used in comparable clinical contexts, helping you and your care team see movement toward higher or lower concern.
  • Integrate results with imaging (e.g., transvaginal ultrasound), pelvic exam, and related tumor markers (such as HE4 or CA‑125 alone) for a more complete view of ovarian cancer risk.

What Is an OVA1 Test?

The OVA1 test is an FDA‑cleared, blood‑based panel that measures five proteins—CA‑125, apolipoprotein A1, beta‑2 microglobulin, transferrin, and transthyretin—and combines them into a single score (0.0 to 10.0). It is performed on a standard blood draw, typically analyzed by immunoassays in a certified laboratory, then processed by a proprietary algorithm to estimate the likelihood that a diagnosed ovarian/adnexal mass is malignant. Results are interpreted against established cutoffs that differ by menopausal status: scores at or above the cutoff are considered higher risk and support referral to a gynecologic oncologist for surgery.

Why this matters: ovarian cancer is often subtle early on. By translating multiple protein signals into one risk score, the test gives your team objective data to triage care—who operates, where, and how extensively—at the moment when surgical decision-making has the biggest impact. Used alongside ultrasound and clinical evaluation, it reflects biological pathways tied to tumor activity, inflammation, and protein transport, helping uncover risk that might not be obvious from any single marker.

Why Is It Important to Test Your Ovarian Cancer Risk?

Ovarian tumors can alter patterns of proteins in the bloodstream. Testing captures that pattern and converts it into a probability signal that links directly to critical decisions: whether to involve a gynecologic oncologist, how to plan surgery, and how urgently to act. This is especially relevant if you have an adnexal mass on imaging and surgery is already planned. In that preoperative window, identifying a higher likelihood of malignancy can optimize the first operation—where complete staging and appropriate tumor debulking are most effective for survival.

Zooming out, this is about prevention of missed opportunities. Regular screening for ovarian cancer is not recommended for the general population, and the OVA1 test is not a screening test. Instead, it functions as a precision triage tool at a key decision point. Published studies show high sensitivity for detecting malignancy in this setting—often in the 90% range—though specificity is lower, meaning false positives can occur and results must be interpreted in context. The goal isn’t to “pass” or “fail,” but to see where your biology sits today so your care plan is as strategic and timely as possible.

What Insights Will I Get From an OVA1 Test?

Your report shows a numeric score from 0.0 to 10.0, categorized by menopausal status (different cutoffs for premenopausal and postmenopausal adults). Instead of “normal” or “abnormal,” results are framed as lower‑risk or higher‑risk for malignancy in someone with a mass already identified by imaging. A score below the cutoff supports a lower likelihood of cancer; a score at or above the cutoff supports a higher likelihood and the potential benefit of care by a gynecologic oncologist. Context is everything: the same number can carry different weight depending on your ultrasound findings, exam, and medical history.

Balanced, lower‑risk scores suggest the combined protein pattern does not resemble what is more typically seen with ovarian malignancy. That can align with benign conditions and may support proceeding with surgery by a general gynecologist, depending on your overall clinical picture. Variation is expected and can reflect menopausal status, short‑term biological fluctuation, and laboratory differences. The number itself is a risk signal—not a diagnosis.

Higher‑risk scores indicate that the composite of CA‑125 and the other proteins leans toward patterns more often associated with malignancy. This does not mean you have cancer. It means the pretest probability is higher, and involving a gynecologic oncologist—who is trained to perform comprehensive staging and cytoreductive procedures—can improve outcomes if cancer is confirmed.

The real power of the OVA1 test lies in how it informs the care pathway. When interpreted alongside ultrasound, pelvic exam, and other tumor markers, it helps your team recognize patterns that guide the right surgery the first time. If your clinician repeats testing in comparable circumstances, changes may help frame discussions about evolving risk, though the assay is not intended for general screening or long‑term surveillance. As always, results should be interpreted by your care team, who can integrate them with your symptoms, imaging, and goals.

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Frequently Asked Questions About

What do OVA1 tests measure?

OVA1 is a blood-based multibiomarker test that measures the levels of five proteins — including CA‑125 plus transthyretin (prealbumin), apolipoprotein A‑1, beta‑2 microglobulin and transferrin — and combines those measurements into a single numerical risk score indicating the likelihood that an adnexal (ovarian) mass is malignant.

OVA1 is intended as an adjunct to clinical assessment to help guide referral and surgical planning (for example, identifying patients who may need a gynecologic oncologist) but is not a definitive diagnostic test; abnormal results increase suspicion for cancer and must be interpreted alongside imaging and clinical findings.

How is your OVA1 sample collected?

A trained healthcare professional collects a small venous blood sample (a single routine blood draw) from your arm using standard phlebotomy procedures.

The sample is processed and sent to the reference laboratory for measurement of the OVA1 marker panel; results are returned to your clinician to help assess risk as part of your overall evaluation and are not by themselves a definitive diagnosis.

What can my OVA1 test results tell me about my cancer risk?

OVA1 is a blood test that combines several protein markers into a single numerical score to estimate the likelihood that an existing pelvic/adnexal mass is malignant. It is intended as an aid for people who already have a detectable mass and is used alongside clinical exam and imaging: a lower score suggests a lower likelihood of cancer while a higher score indicates a greater likelihood and may prompt referral to a gynecologic oncologist or different surgical planning.

OVA1 is not a diagnostic test, not a general screening test for people without a mass, and it cannot tell you cancer stage, type, location, or prognosis. False positives and false negatives occur, so your result must be interpreted with other clinical information; your clinician can explain what your personal OVA1 level means for next steps such as additional testing, specialist referral, or treatment planning.

How accurate or reliable are OVA1 tests?

OVA1 is a multibiomarker blood test used to help assess the likelihood that an adnexal (ovarian) mass is malignant before surgery; it is designed to be sensitive (good at detecting cancers) but has lower specificity, so it produces a substantial number of false positives. Because of that trade‑off, a high OVA1 result raises concern and often triggers referral to a gynecologic oncologist, but it cannot by itself confirm cancer.

OVA1 should be interpreted alongside clinical evaluation and imaging—it's not a screening test for asymptomatic women—and results can vary with age, menopausal status and tumor type. In short, OVA1 can improve detection of malignancy risk but is not definitive; clinical judgment and further diagnostic workup remain essential.

How often should I test my OVA1 levels?

OVA1 is intended as an adjunctive test to help triage a newly discovered adnexal or pelvic mass prior to surgery, so it is typically performed once at the time the mass is being evaluated and surgical planning is considered; repeat testing is only warranted if the clinical situation changes (for example the mass changes on exam or imaging or surgery is postponed and reassessment is needed).

OVA1 is not recommended as a routine screening or surveillance test for ovarian cancer—surveillance and follow‑up decisions (including use of CA‑125, imaging, and exam frequency) should be made with your gynecologist or gynecologic oncologist based on your individual risk and clinical course.

Are OVA1 test results diagnostic?

No — OVA1 test results are not diagnostic. They highlight patterns of biomarker imbalance or resilience rather than providing a definitive diagnosis of cancer.

OVA1 results should be interpreted by a qualified clinician alongside symptoms, medical history, physical exam findings, and other laboratory or biomarker data to guide further evaluation and management.

How can I improve my OVA1 levels after testing?

You generally cannot reliably "improve" OVA1 numbers the way you would lower cholesterol — OVA1 is a multivariate blood assay used to help assess the likelihood that an adnexal mass is malignant, and levels can be affected by many benign or medical conditions (inflammation, infection, pregnancy, liver disease, endometriosis, etc.). If your OVA1 is abnormal, the appropriate next steps are to discuss the result with your ordering clinician, who may recommend further evaluation (pelvic imaging, repeat testing, CA‑125 or other markers, and/or referral to a gynecologic oncologist) or treatment of any identified reversible condition and then reassessment.

While general health measures (smoking cessation, treating infections or inflammatory conditions, managing chronic medical problems) are good for overall cancer risk and health, there’s no proven targeted intervention to reliably lower an abnormal OVA1 result; do not attempt to manipulate test results. Follow your provider’s recommendations for diagnostic follow‑up, treatment of reversible causes, and surveillance so that decisions are based on appropriate clinical evaluation rather than trying to change the assay value itself.

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