1.For pediatric craniopharyngioma patients with anterior pituitary dysfunction, should the tumor be surgically removed first or should the hormone secretion function be corrected first? Hormone supplementation therapy should be given one week before surgery, and then surgery should be performed. If there is no hormone supplementation before surgery, the postoperative complications arising with hypothalamic pituitary function impairment are more serious and can affect the patient’s post-surgical recovery. 2.After surgical removal of the occupying lesion, will the anterior pituitary function improve on its own? How should anterior pituitary function be adjusted after surgery? About 80% of craniopharyngiomas have low pituitary function (both low hormone levels) after surgery, and recovery is very difficult. Endocrine hormone supplementation therapy is needed under the guidance of a doctor. 3.Can anterior pituitary function be restored with postoperative hormone therapy? Is it necessary to use hormone therapy all the time? Hormone supplementation is definitely needed after surgery. However, there are many factors affecting whether pituitary function can be recovered, and the recovery of pituitary function is different for each patient. For patients who cannot recover, hormone therapy must be administered for a long time. 4.Which items should be checked in the postoperative review of anterior pituitary function? How long is the interval between rechecking? To check the pituitary function, we need to take blood for hypothalamic-pituitary hormone examination, which includes more than ten specific indicators, and these are the responsibility of doctors. Generally the review of endocrine hormone needs to be interval of 3 months. 5.For female patients, what should I do if there is amenorrhea after surgery? Will the sexual function of male patients be affected? Female patients with postoperative amenorrhea and male patients with sexual dysfunction need to find an endocrinologist for diagnosis and treatment. 6.Can female patients get pregnant after surgery? What preparations should be made before pregnancy? Is hormone therapy still needed when there is no fertility requirement? All patients with craniopharyngioma need hormone therapy after surgery. Whether a woman can get pregnant depends on whether her endocrine function is normal or not, and it is usually difficult to get pregnant. If a woman with this type of craniopharyngioma has endocrine decline since she was a child, her ovaries and uterus have problems developing and it is difficult for her to ovulate, so assisted reproductive technology cannot make her pregnant.