Skip to Content
800-533-8762
  • Careers
  • Newsroom
  • Health Care Professionals
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
UPMC
  • Find a Doctor
  • Conditions
  • Services
    • Frequently Searched Services
    • Frequently Searched Services
      Allergy & Immunology Behavioral & Mental Health Cancer Ear, Nose & Throat Endocrinology Gastroenterology Heart & Vascular Imaging Neurosciences Orthopaedics
      Physical Rehabilitation Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery Primary Care Senior Services Sports Medicine Telemedicine Transplant Surgery Walk-In Care Weight Management Women’s Health
      See all Services
    • Services by Region
    • Find a UPMC health care facility close to you quickly by browsing by region.
      UPMC in Western Pa. Western Pa. and New York
      Highlighted Regional Map of UPMC in Central Pa. Central Pa.
      UPMC in North Central Pa. North Central Pa.
      UPMC in Western Md. Maryland & West Virginia
    • See All Services
  • Locations
    • Locations by Type
    • Locations by Type
      UPMC hospitals
      Hospitals
      Physical Therapy
      Physical Therapy
      Urgent care
      Walk-In Care
      UPMC Outpatient Centers
      Outpatient Centers
      UPMC Imaging Services
      Imaging
      Community Health Centers
      Community Health Centers
      See All Locations
    • Locations by Region
    • Locations by Region
      UPMC in Southwest Pa. Southwest Pa.
      UPMC in North Central Pa. North Central Pa.
      UPMC in Northwest Pa and Ny. Northwest Pa. & Western N.Y.
      UPMC in West Central Pa. West Central Pa.
      Highlighted Regional Map of UPMC in Central Pa. Central Pa.
      UPMC in Western Md. Maryland & West Virginia
    • See All Locations
  • Patients & Visitors
    • Patient & Visitor Resources
    • Patient & Visitor Resources
      Patients and Visitors Resources Pay a Bill Classes & Events Health Library International Traveling Patients Medical Records
      Patient Information Patient Portals Privacy Information Shared Decision Making Visitor Information
      Man uses mobile phone
      Pay a Bill
      Nurse reviews medical chart
      Request Medical Records
  • Patient Portals
  • Find Covid-19 updates
  • Schedule an appointment
  • Request medical records
  • Pay a bill
  • Learn about financial assistance
  • Find classes & events
  • Send a patient an eCard
  • Make a donation
  • Volunteer
  • Read HealthBeat blog
  • Explore UPMC Careers
Skip to Content
UPMC
  • Find a Doctor
    • Doctor Search
  • Conditions
    • Search Conditions We Treat
  • Services
    • Frequently Searched Services
      • Heart and Vascular Services
      • Neurosciences Services
      • Orthopaedics Services
      • Primary Care Services
      • Spine Care Services
      • Sports Medicine Services
      • Transplant Services
      • Women's Health Services
      • See all Services
    • Services by Region
      • Find Care in Western Pa
      • Find Care in Central Pa
      • Find Care in North Central Pa
      • Find Care in Western Maryland
    • See All Services
  • Locations
    • Locations by Type
      • Hospitals
      • Walk-In Care
      • Imaging
      • Physical Therapy
      • Outpatient
      • Community Health Centers
      • See All Locations
    • Locations by Region
      • Central Pa.
      • Maryland and West Virginia
      • North Central Pa.
      • Northwest Pa. & Western N.Y.
      • Southwest Pa.
      • West Central Pa.
    • See All Locations
  • Patients & Visitors
    • Patient & Visitor Resources
      • Pay a Bill
      • Classes & Events
      • Health Library
      • International Traveling Patients
      • Medical Records
      • Patient Information
      • Patient Portals
      • Privacy Information
      • Shared Decision Making
      • Visitor Information
      • View All Patients and Visitors Resources
  • I Want To
    • Find Covid-19 updates
    • Schedule an appointment
    • Request medical records
    • Pay a bill
    • Learn about financial assistance
    • Find classes & events
    • Send a patient an eCard
    • Make a donation
    • Volunteer
    • Read HealthBeat blog
    • Explore UPMC Careers
  • Patient Portals
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • UPMC >
  • Conditions >
  • Craniopharyngiomas

Craniopharyngiomas

Craniopharyngiomas are benign (noncancerous) tumors that grow at the base of the brain near the pituitary gland. These tumors can put pressure on different parts of the brain, which can cause additional symptoms in the body. While treatment options can be complex given the tumor’s size and location, surgery is known to be successful.

Looking for Craniopharyngioma Care?

Related services:
  • Cancer.
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat.
  • Neurology.
  • Neurosurgery.
  • Pediatric Cancer.
  • Pediatric Ear, Nose, and Throat.
  • Pediatric Neurology.
  • Pediatric Neurosurgery.
  • Pediatrics.
Find a Provider

On this page:

  • What Is Craniopharyngioma?
  • What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Craniopharyngioma?
  • How Do You Diagnose Craniopharyngioma?
  • How Do You Treat Craniopharyngioma?

What Is Craniopharyngioma?

Craniopharyngioma is a benign brain tumor that originates in the pituitary gland. This pea-sized gland is responsible for secreting hormones into the body.

Though benign and unable to spread, craniopharyngioma tumors can grow and place excessive pressure on the brain and cause severe headaches, vision problems, and vomiting. Damage to the pituitary gland can lead to hormonal problems, ranging from excessive thirst to stunted growth.

What are the types of craniopharyngioma?

There are two key types of craniopharyngiomas:

  • Adamantinomatous (ordinary) craniopharyngioma — Occurs in children and is more common.
  • Papillary craniopharyngioma — Occurs in adults and is less frequently diagnosed.

How common is craniopharyngioma?

Craniopharyngioma is rare — fewer than 1,000 new cases are diagnosed in children and adults each year in the United States.

What causes craniopharyngioma?

The exact cause of craniopharyngioma is not known, but research suggests that certain changes to brain cell function can trigger the development of craniopharyngiomas.

Back to top

Craniopharyngioma risk factors

You are at a higher risk for craniopharyngioma if you are:

  • Between the ages of 5 and 10.

Back to top

Complications of craniopharyngioma

Other conditions may result from damage to the pituitary gland caused by the craniopharyngioma, including:

  • Adrenal failure (dizziness, hypoglycemia, cardiac arrhythmias, lethargy, confusion, anorexia, nausea, and vomiting).
  • Decreased sexual drive, including impotence in men and amenorrhea in women.
  • Delayed puberty and stunted growth in pediatric patients.
  • Diabetes insipidus (excessive thirst and urination).
  • Hypothyroidism (weight gain, fatigue, cold intolerance, and constipation).
  • Overeating, obesity, and sleepiness.

Back to top

How can I prevent craniopharyngioma?

There is no way to prevent craniopharyngiomas, as these cell changes happened while you or your child were still being developed in utero.

Back to top

What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Craniopharyngioma?

Depending on the hormones or area(s) of the brain the tumor is affecting, craniopharyngioma symptoms can include:

  • Balance problems.
  • Delayed puberty in children.
  • Disruption of hormone production by the pituitary gland.
  • Excessive thirst.
  • Excessive urination.
  • Extreme tiredness and fatigue.
  • Headaches due to increasing pressure on the brain.
  • Hearing loss.
  • Nausea and vomiting.
  • Personality changes.
  • Progressive loss of vision.
  • Slow growth in children.
  • Vision problems due to the tumor pressing on or damaging the optic nerve.
  • Weight gain.

When should I see a doctor about my craniopharyngioma symptoms?

If you or your child are experiencing any of the above symptoms, make an appointment with your doctor or child’s pediatrician. Early diagnosis of craniopharyngioma can lead to better treatment outcomes.

Back to top

How Do You Diagnose Craniopharyngioma?

To make the diagnosis of craniopharyngioma, your doctor may:

  • Ask you about your symptoms and medical history.
  • Order diagnostic tests, such as MRI and CT scans.
  • Perform a physical exam.

Depending on your other symptoms, such as hormonal and visual problems, your doctor may refer you to an endocrinologist or ophthalmologist to further diagnose your craniopharyngioma.

What to expect during your visit

First, your doctor or your child’s pediatrician will ask about symptoms, health history, and family history. Because some symptoms may indicate other conditions, you can expect diagnostic tests to be ordered.

These tests may include:

  • Blood hormone study — Studies a blood sample to determine the amount of certain hormones in the blood. Higher or lower than normal results of certain hormones may indicate craniopharyngioma.
  • Imaging tests — Such as CT scans or MRIs help doctors get a better image inside the body.
  • Visual field exam — Checks a person’s field of vision, or total area of vision. They will test central and peripheral vision, as loss of eyesight is a symptom of a benign brain tumor pressing on the optic nerve.
  • Biopsy for craniopharyngioma — Takes a small tumor or tissue sample to be examined under a microscope for cancer cells. During this procedure, a surgeon will either remove the tissue from a needle in the skull in an open or minimally invasive surgery, or remove the biopsy sample through the nose. The tissue sample is then sent to a lab for a pathologist to view and diagnose.

Craniopharyngioma prognosis

While most people who have craniopharyngioma live for many years after diagnosis, there is a significant risk for recurring (returning) tumors. Most recurring tumors come back within three years of surgical removal.

Back to top

How Do You Treat Craniopharyngioma?

Most craniopharyngioma cases can be treated with minimally invasive surgery, although surgery can vary depending on the size, shape, and location of the tumor. For some people, radiation therapy after surgery may be recommended.

Minimally invasive surgery

Surgery is the primary treatment for craniopharyngiomas.

Craniopharyngiomas of the skull base may be approached directly using the endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA). This state-of-the-art, minimally invasive approach allows surgeons to access the tumor through the natural corridor of the nose, without making an open incision. Surgeons then remove the craniopharyngioma through the nose and nasal cavities.

EEA offers the benefits of no incisions to heal, no disfigurement, and a faster recovery time. If you need complementary treatments, such as radiation, those therapies can begin soon after EEA surgery.

Although the goal of the surgery is total tumor removal with pituitary function preservation, in some cases the craniopharyngioma's proximity to critical brain structures (the hypothalamus, optic chiasm, and blood vessels) makes complete removal impossible.

The expanded endonasal approach gives surgeons the best view of the undersurface of the optic nerves, chiasm, and pituitary stalk, and helps them decide whether to leave residual tumor attached to these important structures.

In cases where the tumor has clearly invaded the pituitary gland, surgeons may also remove the pituitary gland.

Gamma Knife® radiosurgery

Gamma Knife radiosurgery is a painless treatment that uses hundreds of highly focused radiation beams to target tumors and lesions within the brain, with no surgical incision.

Surgeons may use Gamma Knife radiosurgery:

  • After surgery to treat residual craniopharyngioma tumors.
  • At the time of tumor recurrence.

Doctors at UPMC — the nation's leading provider of Gamma Knife procedures — have used this technology to effectively treat 12,000 patients with tumors, vascular malformations, pain, and other functional problems.

Radiation therapy

In instances where it's not safe to remove a craniopharyngioma tumor completely, radiation may follow surgery as the next preferred treatment.

Radiation therapy for residual craniopharyngioma tumors:

  • Eradicates the remaining tumor cells.
  • Has success rates on par with those of complete tumor removal.

Back to top

  • UCSF Brain Tumor Center, Craniopharyngioma.
  • National Cancer Institute, Childhood Craniopharyngioma (PDQ®)–Patient Version.
  • National Library of Medicine, Craniopharyngioma.

By UPMC Editorial Team. Reviewed on 2025-07-03.

2025-07-03
2026-04-22
Craniopharyngiomas​
Craniopharyngiomas are noncancerous tumors at the base of the brain, near the pituitary gland. They can put pressure on different parts of the brain, causing symptoms throughout the body.
UPMC
200 Lothrop Street Pittsburgh, PA 15213

412-647-8762 800-533-8762

Patients And Visitors
  • Find a Doctor
  • Locations
  • Pay a Bill
  • Patient & Visitor Resources
  • Disabilities Resource Center
  • Services
  • Medical Records
  • No Surprises Act
  • Price Transparency
  • Financial Assistance
  • Classes & Events
  • Health Library
Health Care Professionals
  • Physician Information
  • Resources
  • Education & Training
  • Departments
  • Credentialing
Newsroom
  • Newsroom Home
  • Inside Life Changing Medicine Blog
  • News Releases
About
  • Why UPMC
  • Facts & Stats
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Community Commitment
  • Financials
  • Supporting UPMC
  • HealthBeat Blog
  • UPMC Apps
  • UPMC Enterprises
  • UPMC Health Plan
  • UPMC International
  • Nondiscrimination Policy
Life changing is...
Follow UPMC
  • Contact Us
  • Website/Email Terms of Use
  • Medical Advice Disclaimer
  • Privacy Information
  • Active Privacy Alerts
  • Sitemap
© 2026 UPMC I Affiliated with the University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences Supplemental content provided by WebMD Ignite. To learn more, visit webmdignite.com.
Find Care
Providers
Video Visit
Portal Login

Chat Keywords List

  • cancel or exit: Stops your conversation
  • start over: Restarts your current scenario
  • help: Shows what this bot can do
  • terms: Shows terms of use and privacy statement
  • feedback: Give us feedback
Continue
Chat with UPMC
RESTART
MENU
CLOSE