As yet, no optimal treatment for stage-IIIA non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been established. Particularly, in the patients with stage-IIIA N2 disease, surgical resection for cure is limited to few selected patients. Of late, a number of studies have suggested that such treatment modalities as chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery might be combined to improve treatment efficacy. Based on these conclusions, a cooperative study for N2 NSCLC patients was performed. Treatment included continuous CDDP infusion (6 mg/m2/day) and concomitant irradiation. Fifteen patients were examined. After neoadjuvant treatment, 4 patients were found to have unresectable lesions for local disease progression or metastasis. Eleven patients underwent complete resection (73% resectability). Follow-up ranged 6 to 32 months: 6 patients are now free from relapse (respectively at 31, 28, 23, 14, 12 and 3 months) and 1 is alive with adrenal gland metastasis. Overall and disease-free survival rates are 40.6% and 31.5%, respectively. Our preliminary results indicated that this protocol is well tolerated. Resectability was good and tumor sterilization rate was satisfying (complete T and N sterilization in 6 cases, sterilization of either T or N in 3 cases). The patients with non-adenocarcinoma histology exhibited better local control and prognosis than those with histologic diagnosis of adenocarcinoma.