Long-term survival outcomes after biomarker-guided thromboprophylaxis in cancer: extended follow-up of the TARGET-TP randomised trial
Journal Title
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Publication Type
Mar 7
Abstract
Thromboembolism (TE) is a major cause of early mortality in cancer. TARGET-TP randomised high-risk patients with lung or gastrointestinal cancers, identified using a d-dimer/fibrinogen model, to enoxaparin or no thromboprophylaxis; low-risk patients were observed. Thromboprophylaxis reduced TE and 6-month mortality. This study reports extended overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) to 36 months. Among high-risk patients, thromboprophylaxis improved OS at 6 and 12 months, with convergence thereafter; no PFS differences were observed. Adjustment for on-study TE attenuated the OS effect, consistent with thrombosis-specific risk reduction. These findings describe the duration and extent of survival benefit achievable with biomarker-guided thromboprophylaxis and highlight that TARGET-TP is the first trial to demonstrate a survival advantage, likely driven by cohort enrichment for thrombotic risk. The improved risk-benefit profile supports real-world evaluation of d-dimer/fibrinogen-guided thromboprophylaxis in lung and gastrointestinal cancers, with validation of the model warranted in additional tumour groups.
Publisher
Oxford Academic
Research Division(s)
Personalised Oncology
PubMed ID
41784981
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djag065
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2026-03-16 01:38:22
Last Modified: 2026-03-16 01:52:35
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙