During the years 1975 to 1980, 10 male patients and 1 female, with ages ranging between 40 to 61 years, underwent combined resection of primary lung cancer and solitary brain metastasis. In 8 patients the lung cancer was diagnosed and treated first. In those patients, craniotomy for removal of a solitary brain metastasis was carried out 8 to 60 months (mean, 27 months) after excision of the lung tumor. In 3 patients, brain metastasis was diagnosed and treated first and lung excision followed, 2 to 4 weeks after craniotomy. The most common histologic type of the tumor was adenocarcinoma (63.6%). There were no operative deaths. Three patients survived less than 6 months after surgery and were considered as a failure of surgical treatment. Seven patients lived longer than 1 year and three of them are still alive with a follow-up period between 2 to 3 1/2 years after both operations. One of the patients underwent recently successfully second brain intervention for removal of recurrent histologically identical solitary brain metastasis and is well. Our results and those reported in literature encourage the combined surgical removal of primary lung cancer and a solitary brain metastasis.