The prognosis of bronchial carcinoma especially in advanced tumor stage is poor despite different methods of treatment. The 5-year survival rate after radical operation is about 25-40% for all stages, and between 17-20% in stage III. Without therapy it is 3.5-9.5%. T3-tumors and N2-lymphnodes represent the limit of surgical therapy. From 1980 to 1988 we operated 456 patients because of bronchial carcinoma, 80% men (mean age 59.2 y) and 20% women (mean age 56.9 y). 83.1% had been smokers, 16.9% had been exposed to contaminants. At admission to the hospital 36% were in stage I, 13% in stage II, 47% in stage III, and 4% in stage IV.
Histology: squamous cell carcinoma 40.9%, adenocarcinoma 26.1%, large cell carcinoma 21.9%, and small cell carcinoma 11.1%. Looking at all cases we mostly performed a lobectomy, in stage III tumors the most common operation was pneumonectomy. In this group only 57.5% of the patients were resectable. In 77 potentially curative operated patients in stage III with non-small cell carcinoma we performed an adjuvant radio-, chemo- or combined therapy. The cumulative survival rates for all patients in the 1st year were 85% in stage I, 67% in stage II, and 36% in stage III and IV. In the 3rd year 57%, 14% and 10%, and in the 5th year 41%, 7%, and 5%. In stage III the survival rates of the potentially curative operated vs. the exploratively operated patients were in the 1st year 50%/36%, in the 3rd year 16%/10%, and in the 5th year 11%/5%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)