In 88 resected patients with esophagus-invading gastric cancer, the factors determining the prognosis of this disease were investigated by multivariate analysis. Neither, age, sex, macroscopic type, thoracotomy, nor histological type proved to be independent prognostic factors. The presence or absence of lymph node metastasis, serosal invasion, tumor size, and the extent of esophageal invasion were found to be significant independent prognostic factors. Among lymph node metastases, involvement of para-aortic lymph nodes was especially important. The prognosis was significantly better in cases in which these nodes were carefully dissected (R4 gastrectomy), than in cases in which selected dissection was performed (R2). However, no patient with mediastinal lymph node metastasis survived for any lengthy period, and thus the mediastinal lymph nodes seemed to be nodes, the dissection of which brought little effect. Postoperative results were very poor in cases in which the extent of the esophageal invasion was 3 cm or more. These patients should be treated with multi-modal therapy such as neoadjuvant chemotherapy.