On July 24th, Prof. Chen Yajin, Director of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, and Associate Prof. Zhang Hongwei, Director of Hepatobiliary Surgery, with the support of Prof. Peng Shuling, Director of Anesthesiology, and Associate Prof. Yip Sai Jao, successfully resected a huge malignant tumor of the liver, which weighed 6.5 kilograms, from the top student of the Science subject in the Sanshui District of Foshan City in 2010, for Mr. Li Mingbin. Li Mingbin lost his father at a young age, his family is poor, but he is self-improvement, optimistic, in 2010 with a high score of 684 to become the Sanshui District College Entrance Examination Science Scholarship and Language Single Subject Scholarship, the same year into the Department of Electronic Engineering of Nanjing University to study, in mid-June this year, found that the epigastric rumbling, and rapid growth, has been to the province of the major hospitals, have consulted, due to the tumor is huge and suspected of lung metastasis, the risk of surgery is too high and give up the treatment! He went home. However, the tumor in the patient’s body was growing rapidly, and when she came to our hospital, her abdomen was as large as that of a pregnant woman who was carrying a baby for ten months, and the tumor might rupture and bleed at any time. If not treated in time, 21-year-old Li Mingbin’s life is estimated to be less than a month. Since his illness, he has received care and donations from all walks of life, the local government and a large number of microblogging fans to cheer for him and actively fundraising, reluctant Li Mingbin then came to our hospital to seek medical treatment, admitted to the Department of Interventional Medicine, Xu Linfeng, director of the hospital enthusiastically and meticulously examined him, taking into account the tumor is huge, the complexity of the blood supply, the interventional therapy alone is difficult to achieve the desired effect, and so Xu Linfeng, director of the hospital to organize a whole-hospital consultative process. Prof. Chen Yajin, Director of Hepatobiliary Surgery, was touched by the patient’s positive and optimistic spirit and strong desire to survive. In order to extend his young life and to buy time and space for follow-up treatment, after precise evaluation, it was believed that the patient still had a chance to have an operation, but it was necessary to resect 6 out of the 8 hepatic segments, and the residual liver was only about 30%, so the risk of intra-operative hemorrhage and post-operative hepatic failure was relatively high. After thorough preoperative preparation, with the full cooperation of the Department of Anesthesiology, various advanced instruments and minimally invasive techniques were used to cut the liver without blocking the blood flow of the liver, so as to maximize the protection of the residual liver cells from the damage caused by ischemia and reperfusion. The operation went smoothly, lasting nearly 4 hours, with only about 500 ml of intraoperative bleeding. After a week of careful monitoring and treatment, the patient’s liver function indexes have returned to normal and he is now recovering successfully. The Department of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery of our hospital has long been well versed in dealing with all kinds of difficult hepato-biliary and pancreatic diseases, and has been recognized by peers nationwide. Precision and minimally invasiveness are the main technical advantages, and last year six advanced training courses on hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgical techniques were held consecutively. 2011, the Department of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery was ranked ninth in China by a third-party independent organization, and the Department of General Surgery, which has hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgery as the most important backbone, was awarded the National Key Specialty Construction Program in 2012, which is the most important recognition of the specialty level of general surgery of the Hospital at the national level. This is the most important affirmation of our hospital’s general surgery specialty level at the national level.