Malignant tumor is one of the important acquired risk factors of venous thromboembolism (VTE). As the transmembrane receptor of coagulation factor Ⅶ and activated coagulation factor Ⅶa in vivo, tissue factor is the main initiator of exogenous coagulation. Tissue factor positive particles expressed and released by tumor cells enter the circulation and mediate thrombosis in patients with surgical treatment and distant tumor metastasis; the enhanced procoagulant activity of tissue factor after chemotherapy makes many cancer patients more likely to develop thromboembolic disease. Tissue factors can also be used to predict the risk of VTE in patients with pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer and ovarian cancer.This article summarizes the role of tissue factor in VTE of cancer patients at different treatment stages, and further clarifies the relationship between tissue factor and the risk of VTE in cancer patients.