The overall surgical survival data in the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) registry have not been published to date, pending the report of the randomized medical-surgical comparison (CASS randomized trial). Non-randomized surgical survival data from the CASS registry are given in this article. The overall medical survival data from the registry were reported previously as a natural history study. There were 8,991 patients in the registry portion of CASS who had primary isolated coronary artery bypass grafting and 8,971 with follow-up of more than 30 days. The 5-year survival for all 8,971 patients was 90%, and the operative mortality was 2.37%. Patients with left main coronary artery disease had an operative mortality of 3.84% and a 5-year survival of 85%, while patients with lesions in other vessels had an operative mortality of 2.12% and a 5-year survival of 91%. Among patients without left main coronary disease, the 5-year survival was 93% in those with single-vessel and 92% in those with double-vessel disease (operative mortality was 1.50% and 1.92%, respectively) and 88% in patients with triple-vessel disease (operative mortality was 2.62%; p = 0.009). When results for patients with left main coronary artery obstruction were compared with those for triple-vessel disease, the 5-year survival figures were 85% and 88%, respectively (p = 0.02) and the operative mortality, 3.84% and 2.62%, respectively (p = 0.03). Patients with normal or nearly normal left ventricular (LV) function (i.e., LV segmental wall motion scores ranging from 5 through 11) had a 5-year survival of 92% and an operative mortality of 1.97%. Patients with moderate impairment (LV score range, 12 through 16) had a 5-year survival of 80% and an operative mortality of 4.21%. In those with poor ventricular function (LV score of 17 or greater), the 5-year survival was 65% and the operative mortality was 6.21%. The difference in survival among the three groups was significant (p less than 0.0001). Of 29 variables used in a stepwise Cox regression analysis, LV wall motion score, congestive heart failure score, age, number of operable vessels, smoking history, LV end-diastolic pressure, and percent of left main coronary artery stenosis were found to have a significant effect on long-term survival (excluding 30-day mortality), and these variables plus surgical priority and height influenced surgical mortality. When height was used in the Cox proportional hazards model, female sex was no longer a significant variable.