Extracellular Vesicle (EV) secretion has been observed from most types of normal and tumor cells. These EVs contain a variety of distinctive cargo where tumor-derived serum proteins in EVs secreted into the bloodstream can be used to provide a minimally invasive method for clinical monitoring. We have therefore undertaken a comprehensive study of the protein content of the EVs from several cancer cell lines using direct Data Independent Analysis (DIA). Several thousand proteins were detected including many of the classic EV markers such as CD9, CD81, CD63, TSG101 and Syndecan-1 among others. Many distinctive cancer related proteins were detected and some of them are known to be potential markers of cancer detection and monitoring of cancer progression. We have further studied the protein content of EVs from patient serum for both normal controls and pancreatic (PC) and Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) cancers. The EVs for these studies have been isolated by various methods for comparison including ultracentrifugation (UC) and CD9 immunoaffinity column (CD9-IC). Typically, 500-1,000 proteins were identified where most of them overlapped with the EV proteins identified from the cell lines studied. Many of the EV protein markers were identified in these serum EVs and large numbers of proteins related to pancreatic and HCC cancers were identified.