To determine the impact of pulmonary infections on survival in patients with lung cancer, a retrospective review of the rec&ds of 121 such patients treated at Howard University Hospital in Washington, DC, was done. There were 77 men and 44 women; 118 were black. The mean age was 63.5 years. Forty-three patients had squamous cell carcinoma, 31 had adenocarcinoma, 18 had large cell carcinoma, 19 had small cell carcinoma, and ten were unclassified. The stages were as follows: two patients in Stage 0 , 1 5 in Stage I, seven in Stage II,45 in Stage 111, and 44 in Stage IV. Eight patients could not be staged at diagnosis. Eighty-five patients (70%) had documented infections; 37 had single episodes; and 48 had more than one. The five most cdmmon organisms recovered were alpha/gamma streptococci, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, En terobacter aerogenes, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The median survival of all infected patients was 4.2 months which was significantly shorter than that of uninfected patients who had a median survival of 12.9 months (P < 0.05). When Stage I11 patients were analyzed separately, infected patients lived a median of 5.8 months and uninfected patients, 13.4 months (P < 0.05). This study indicated that pulmonary infections frequently occur in patients with lung cancer and suggested that they may adversely affect survival. Cancer 66:593-596,1990.UNG CANCER is the most common cancer in the L western world and the leading cause of cancer death in the United States.' It is also more common in the black population.* Despite recent advances in the management of these tumors, the cure rate remains low even in patients whose disease is detected early. The cause of death in lung cancer victims is usually attributed to progression of local and/or metastatic disease, and medical problems such as superior vena syndrome, pleural effusions, pericardial infiltration, hypercalcemia, the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone, and coagulopathy may contribute.Surprisingly, the impact of infection on the course of the disease is rarely addressed, but this problem is encountered frequently in these patients. We reviewed retFrom the