
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


"I come from a long line of medical doctors... but I myself was driven by things that move fast in terms of technology."
From a family of physicians, Susan Tousi chose a different path—one that would eventually revolutionize how we detect cancer. After decades building multi-hundred million dollar businesses at HP and Kodak, digitizing how the world captures and shares memories, she made a leap that surprised many: trading the consumer tech world for the promise of genomic medicine.
"Healthcare was moving fairly slowly in terms of technology adoption," Susan recalls. But when Illumina came calling, she saw her chance to change that. As Chief Product Development Officer and later Chief Commercial Officer, she helped drive the cost of human genome sequencing from over $100,000 down to just $100—making the technology accessible in 155 countries worldwide.
Now, as CEO of DELFI Diagnostics, Susan is tackling one of healthcare's deadliest challenges: lung cancer kills more people annually than breast, colorectal, and cervical cancers combined—yet 94% of those who should be screened never get tested. Her solution? A simple blood draw that can detect cancer at stage one, powered by AI and whole genome sequencing, at a cost of just a few hundred dollars.
"If you can get blood drawn, you can get our test," Susan explains. "These tests should be in the few hundreds of dollars, easily covered by the healthcare system, available to patients without copay. Everyone's cancer should be caught early. It should be an annual process."
In this powerful episode of Inspiring Women with Laurie McGraw, Susan also reveals:
From engineering at HP to revolutionizing digital photography at Kodak to detecting cancer at its earliest stages, Susan's journey proves that the fastest-moving technology innovations can transform the slowest-moving healthcare challenges—when you're willing to take the leap.
"There's no greater mission than advancing the improvement of people's healthy lifespan," Susan reflects. "We need women at the table. These are long-term investments. We need to make sure that the diverse population of patients and clinicians who are going to use our tests are represented in the people who develop the tests. That diversity makes us better."
A member of the National Academy of Engineering, Susan Tousi is reshaping how we think about cancer detection—making it accessible, affordable, and available anywhere you can have blood drawn. This is the future of healthcare, and it's happening now.
Chapters
00:02:13 - From Engineering to Healthcare Leadership
00:05:31 - Digital Innovation to Genomic Revolution
00:09:05 - Transforming Lung Cancer Detection
00:13:39 - Women Leading in Biotech
00:16:54 - The Reality of Being CEO
00:20:05 - Advice for Aspiring Women Leaders
Guest & Host Links
Connect with Inspiring Women
Browse Episodes | LinkedIn | Instagram | Apple | Spotify
By Laurie McGraw5
2525 ratings
"I come from a long line of medical doctors... but I myself was driven by things that move fast in terms of technology."
From a family of physicians, Susan Tousi chose a different path—one that would eventually revolutionize how we detect cancer. After decades building multi-hundred million dollar businesses at HP and Kodak, digitizing how the world captures and shares memories, she made a leap that surprised many: trading the consumer tech world for the promise of genomic medicine.
"Healthcare was moving fairly slowly in terms of technology adoption," Susan recalls. But when Illumina came calling, she saw her chance to change that. As Chief Product Development Officer and later Chief Commercial Officer, she helped drive the cost of human genome sequencing from over $100,000 down to just $100—making the technology accessible in 155 countries worldwide.
Now, as CEO of DELFI Diagnostics, Susan is tackling one of healthcare's deadliest challenges: lung cancer kills more people annually than breast, colorectal, and cervical cancers combined—yet 94% of those who should be screened never get tested. Her solution? A simple blood draw that can detect cancer at stage one, powered by AI and whole genome sequencing, at a cost of just a few hundred dollars.
"If you can get blood drawn, you can get our test," Susan explains. "These tests should be in the few hundreds of dollars, easily covered by the healthcare system, available to patients without copay. Everyone's cancer should be caught early. It should be an annual process."
In this powerful episode of Inspiring Women with Laurie McGraw, Susan also reveals:
From engineering at HP to revolutionizing digital photography at Kodak to detecting cancer at its earliest stages, Susan's journey proves that the fastest-moving technology innovations can transform the slowest-moving healthcare challenges—when you're willing to take the leap.
"There's no greater mission than advancing the improvement of people's healthy lifespan," Susan reflects. "We need women at the table. These are long-term investments. We need to make sure that the diverse population of patients and clinicians who are going to use our tests are represented in the people who develop the tests. That diversity makes us better."
A member of the National Academy of Engineering, Susan Tousi is reshaping how we think about cancer detection—making it accessible, affordable, and available anywhere you can have blood drawn. This is the future of healthcare, and it's happening now.
Chapters
00:02:13 - From Engineering to Healthcare Leadership
00:05:31 - Digital Innovation to Genomic Revolution
00:09:05 - Transforming Lung Cancer Detection
00:13:39 - Women Leading in Biotech
00:16:54 - The Reality of Being CEO
00:20:05 - Advice for Aspiring Women Leaders
Guest & Host Links
Connect with Inspiring Women
Browse Episodes | LinkedIn | Instagram | Apple | Spotify

9,599 Listeners

496 Listeners

57,726 Listeners

16,019 Listeners

10,708 Listeners

4,209 Listeners