Between 1979 and 1985, 561 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma were reviewed to determine prognostic factors that may influence survival. Sex (p = 0.294) and histopathology (p = 0.677) had no correlation to the actuarial survival, whereas the site of cervical metastasis (p = 0.001) and the radiation doses to the nasopharynx and regional lymph nodes (p = 0.03) were both significant when one used univariate analyses. Cox's multivariate regression model revealed that the presence rather than the site of distant metastases was the single most important independent factor influencing the treatment outcome (p less than 0.0001). The addition of chemotherapy, on the other hand, did not show a survival benefit even when one took available confounding factors into account. There are, however, survival advantages associated with: (a) young age (less than or equal to 40 years), (b) asymptomatic status, (c) Stage I or II lesions, and (d) biopsy via nasopharynx instead of neck nodes. These favorable prognostic factors may be used for therapeutic guidance and end-result reporting.