Twenty six patients with esophagotracheal fistula or esophagobronchial fistula were treated from 1960 to 1991. There were 18 males and 8 females with age ranging from 19 to 69. Trauma and complication of esophageal diverticulum were the main causes of fistula. Among 23 patients surgically treated, 10 underwent direct repair, and 13 either closure of esophageal defect or tracheal or bronchial defect. The concomitant procedures were permanent tracheostomy, tracheal resection and reconstruction, pulmonary resection, thoracoplasty esophagectomy, and esophagogastric anastomosis. All patients resumed normal eating. Complications included paralysis of recurrent nerves, empyema, injury and ligation of subclavian artery, dehiscence of tracheal anastomosis, and contralateral pneumohydrothorax in each patient. Prognosis of 3 nonsurgical treatments of fistulas was poor. Surgical intervention should be done as soon as the diagnosis is established in order to minimize pulmonary complication.