This article reviews recent developments with the use of adjuvant chemotherapy for resected early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and the implications of these developments for healthcare in New Zealand (NZ). Non-small cell lung cancer is a major cause of mortality and morbidity in NZ, and is greatly over-represented among Maori and socioeconomically deprived populations. Early-stage NSCLC is potentially curable by surgery, but long-term outcome after surgical resection is limited by disease recurrence locally or at sites distant from the primary disease. Three recent large randomised controlled phase III trials using modern platinum-based combination chemotherapy protocols have shown significant survival benefits for the use of postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy after resection of early-stage NSCLC. Cisplatin plus vinorelbine was used as the adjuvant chemotherapy regimen in two of these trials resulting in improvements in 5-year survival of 51.2% versus 42.6% (p=0.013) and 69% versus 54% (p=0.03), respectively. In NZ, adjuvant chemotherapy for NSCLC is expected to prevent up to 15 lung cancer deaths each year for relatively low drug expenditure and has the potential to benefit Maori and the economically-deprived disproportionately more than other populations. In conclusion, it is the opinion of this group of NZ lung cancer specialists that adjuvant chemotherapy with cisplatin plus vinorelbine should now be adopted as a standard of care for patients with resected stage II and III NSCLC. For this to occur, current PHARMAC policies preventing its use for these eligible patients will need to be revised.