After successful organ transplantation, how to overcome rejection and survive for a long time has become the primary problem for “second life” recipients. The news came out from the “Shanghai First People’s Hospital Liver Transplantation 10th Anniversary Celebration and Long-term Health Education for Patients” held recently that the ten-year survival rate of liver transplantation patients in the hospital has reached 57%, and the comprehensive interventions and personalized care plans have greatly improved the quality of long-term survival in the “post-transplantation” era. The long-term survival quality of the “post-transplant era” has been significantly improved. It is understood that more than one million people worldwide have received various types of organ transplants, and China has successfully performed 110,000 organ transplants, making it the second largest organ transplant country in the world. While transplant patients get a second life, the hidden danger of a series of post-operative complications aggravates the inner worries of doctors and patients. Last weekend, more than 200 patients who had undergone transplantation at City One Hospital talked with a team of City One experts about the quality of long-term survival in the “post-transplant era”. Most of them have successfully entered their tenth or even twelve or thirteen years after transplantation. According to Prof. Zhong Lin, Director of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery of the First People’s Hospital, the hospital held lectures on Sundays to educate patients about long-term organ function protection after liver transplantation, focusing on comprehensive care in the “post-transplant era”, “in addition to insisting on follow-up visits to follow up on their In addition to consistent follow-up of metabolic indicators, long-term and correct use of reasonable immunosuppressive drugs, spiritual comfort and nutrition are also very important for the recovery and survival of patients. ” Due to the greater toxicity of immunosuppressive drugs to the kidney, an increasing number of post-liver transplant patients are experiencing renal failure after a long period of time, a phenomenon that has been confirmed internationally. How to emphasize the minimal toxic side effects is the key to improve the long-term survival of transplant patients. In addition to refusing to drink alcohol, weight control and other patient self-coordination, experts also said that the post-operative circulating on the Internet can not eat fungus, mushrooms and other statements are not scientific, but some foods that affect the concentration of drugs such as oranges, grapefruit to control. Private entrepreneur Mr. Sun has been transplanting his liver again for 10 years, before the damage caused by long-term use of anti-rejection drugs, making the previous graft dysfunctional, a team of experts in the city for him to perform another liver transplantation. After the operation, Mr. Sun took drugs, experts in its immunosuppressive program on the brain: how can make the least toxic side effects, is it possible to use independent renal protection function of the drug? For 10 years, all of Mr. Sun’s body functions are normal. There are 28 cases of liver transplantation like Mr. Sun in Shanghai First Hospital, the highest number in Shanghai. Developing a reasonable immunosuppressive regimen that protects the kidney while avoiding increased risk of tumors or other complications is a guarantee to improve the long-term survival rate of patients. Professor Peng Zhihai, Vice President of Shanghai First People’s Hospital and Director of the General Surgery Center, said that it has been more than 13 years since the first liver transplant was carried out at the city’s First People’s Hospital in January 2001, and nearly 1,000 liver transplant patients have achieved long-term survival, with a ten-year survival rate of 57%. At present, the clinical scale, quantity and quality, scientific research, hardware and software conditions and overall technical level of liver transplantation in Shanghai First People’s Hospital have all developed rapidly, and the number of combined liver and kidney transplants is the first in China.