Two hundred and eleven surgically resected primary lung tumors were studied immunohistochemically. According to histologic type, they were 129 adenocarcinomas, 56 squamous cell carcinomas, 4 small cell carcinomas, 8 large cell carcinomas, 8 adenosquamous cell carcinomas, 5 so-called carcinosarcomas and 2 other tumors. Immunohistochemical expression of p53 and bcl-2 was studied in relation to the disease-free survival. Among the 211 patients with lung cancer, 109 were positive for p53 expression, and there was no significant relationship between p53 expression and sex, or clinicopathological stage and size of the tumor, although the patients with squamous cell carcinoma had a significantly higher frequency of p53 expression than those with adenocarcinomas. The frequency of p53 expression was significantly higher in the patients with poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas than in those with other histologic types. Seventy four of the 211 patients were positive for bcl-2 expression and bcl-2 expression was higher in the stage I patients and patients with small lung tumors 2cm or less in diameter than in the other patients. The patients with adenocarcinoma had a higher frequency of expression than those with squamous cell carcinoma but no difference was found in the histological differentiation of the tumor. The 5-year survival of patients positive for p53 expression was poorer than that of those with negative expression and the survival rate was higher in the patients positive for bcl-2 expression than in those with negative expression. These findings suggested that the expression of p53 and bcl-2 is a useful marker of follow-up and prognosis, but will require more data concerning the mechanism of carcinogenesis. Seven cases of primary lung cancer were examined for genetic abnormality of the p53 gene. cDNA was synthesized from total RNA of primary tissues of lung cancer using oligo (dT) primer and reverse transcriptase and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and PCR-single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis were performed. Five patients gave a positive result upon PCR-SSCP analysis of the p53 gene. To confirm the results of PCR-SSCP analysis, their nucleotide sequences were further analyzed and four of them had point mutations at different codons (154, 176, 207, 236) and one had deletion of one nucleotide (245) in exon 5 and 8. Fifteen percent of 26 patients with small peripheral lung adenocarcinomas less than 2cm in diameter were already advanced in stage and various factors such as vascular invasion, pleural involvement and degree of scar grade were higher than in patients with clinicopathological stage I. In advanced cases, the frequencies of p53 expression was higher than in stage I cases. Concerning the relationship of the degree of scar grade to PDGF-B expression, we demonstrated the production of PDGF-B protein immunohistochemically and the expression of PDGF-B-mRNA by In situ hybridization in the adenocarcinoma cells and macrophages of the lung tumors. However, no significant correlation was observed between the degree of PDGF-B expression and collagen production in the fibrotic focus.