Treatment of craniopharyngiomas in children: 1972–1981

Abstract
Between 1972 and 1981, 37 children with craniopharyngioma were cared for at Children's Hospital, Boston. In this paper, the results of treatment with radiation therapy after conservative operations are compared with those following an initial attempt to excise the tumor. Radiation therapy was equally, if not more, effective than attempted excision in controlling subsequent tumor growth. Although this was not a controlled study, the complications of each approach are indicated, and it is inferred that conservative operations combined with radiation therapy offer less risk for psychosocial impairment than does attempted tumor excision when patients are considered as a group. The ultimate effect that either approach might have on quality of life remains to be defined, and therapy must still be individualized to the particular clinical problem.