This retrospective study concerns 683 consecutive patients operated for primary non-small cell lung cancer between 1977 and 1989 (581 men and 102 women with a mean age of 60.3 years). Histology was as follows: squamous in 422 (62%), adenocarcinoma in 207 (30%), broncho-alveolar in 24 (4%) and large-cell in 30 (4%). According to the TNM classification, 304 tumors were graded as stage I (45%), 130 as stage II (19%), 157 as stage IIIA (23%), 62 as stage IIIB (9%) and 19 as stage IV (3%). Surgery consisted of lobectomies in 337 (49%), pneumonectomies in 210 (31%), segmentectomies and wedge resections in 42 (6%), bilobectomies in 41 (6%) and exploratory thoracotomies in 53 (8%). It was curative in 513 cases (75%) and palliative in 170 (25%). 49 patients died within 2 months of the operation (7.2%), while 209 suffered postoperative complications (31%). Mediastinal lymph node dissection was not routinely performed to in this series. However global outcome (30% 5 years survival and 18% at 10 years), compared favorably with that reported by centres that perform mediastinal lymphadenectomy systematically.