Half, you seem to be unable to comprehend the fact that vets are familiar with the test and from the lack of sales, in most situations, they probably do not feel it to be useful.
If Vets felt the test to be useful, it would be selling like hotcakes and the company would not be reporting ZERO revenue in the second quarter as was just reported.
The following was my original post and that was a direct quote of the section pertaining to RECAF. I made NO comments.
Customer Reply
The mass was been removed from his pad and came back within a week or so. Does this suggest anything? His appetite has diminished also.
Have you heard of the blood test from OncoPET called RECAF and its effectiveness?
Accepted Answer
We don't use this test because it doesn't tell you what type of cancer is present. Knowing your dog has cancer is helpful, but it doesn't tell you where it is or what it is doing. We already know your dog has cancer so the test will likely be positive and we won't have any additional information.
Although this test sounds interesting, it won't help us determine the spread of this tumor. It has grown back already which isn't a surprise considering the type of tumor it is, and we are still "in the dark" about where else the tumor might be. The decreased appetite is concerning, and it makes me think more that the tumor is somewhere else, but it doesn't prove anything definitively.