RESUMO
Sixteen cases of primary lung cancer in patients younger than 40 years old had been operated on at the department. There were 8 males and 8 females and the male-to-female ratio was 1:1 that was closer than the ratio in elder patients over 40 years. Histologic types were adenocarcinoma in 7 cases, squamous carcinoma in 5 cases, carcinoid in 2 cases, and small cell carcinoma in 2 cases. In younger patients, adenocarcinomas, small cell carcinomas, and carcinoids were more commonly found than squamous cell carcinomas. Patients in stage I, II, and IIIA and those undergoing a curative resection were predominant in cases without any symptoms preoperatively. The 5-year survival rate of the 16 patients younger than 40 years was 42.9%, that was not significantly different from that of elder patients over 40 years old. This relatively better prognosis might be owing to a fact that operated patients were dominantly composed of asymptomatic patients. In younger patients who have good physical status and respiratory function compared with elder patients, aggressive surgical diagnosis followed by resection, if the definitive diagnosis of malignancy is established may contribute to the improvement of prognosis for patients who was suspected of having malignancy.