“…15-18,24 -26,28,41-52 Among the few studies seeking information on locoregional responses and long term survival in patients who underwent surgery for carcinoma of the lung, in a series of 90 patients, Tosi et al 28 found, as we did, that long term survival was correlated directly with the development of cellular immunity and inversely with the development of a humoral immune response in the locoregional nodes. 14,26,28,[61][62][63] In the current assessment of long term survival, the Cox analysis, including the host immune response and standard prognostic factors for lung carcinoma, such as pathologic disease stage and cell type, identified host immune responses in locoregional lymph nodes and at the primary tumor site as the independent variables with the greatest predictive power. In a series of 29 patients who were treated for bronchogenic squamous cell carcinoma, Kauffman 27 found direct correlations between lymph node morphology and survival, for both cellular and humoral histologic variables.…”