This is the most common type of tumor that forms in the head and may affect the brain. Find out about symptoms, diagnosis and treatment.
Update Date: 07.03.2026
A meningioma is a tumor that starts in the meninges. These are the thin layers that cover the brain and spinal cord. Although a meningioma does not start in brain tissue, it is classified as a primary brain tumor when it forms near the brain and as a spinal cord tumor when it forms near the spinal cord. This classification is based on its location within the central nervous system. Meningiomas make up about one-third of all primary brain tumors.
Most meningiomas grow slowly. Some cause no symptoms for many years. When they get bigger or sit near important areas, they can lead to serious health conditions.
Meningiomas happen more often in women and are found more often in older adults, but they can happen at any age.
Because many meningiomas grow slowly and cause few or no symptoms, treatment is not always needed right away. In some cases, careful monitoring with regular imaging is the best first step.
About 80% to 85% of meningiomas are benign. That means they are not cancerous. Many people do very well after diagnosis, especially when the tumor grows slowly and is monitored with regular scans.
Meningioma symptoms may not be noticeable. They're similar to other brain tumor symptoms and depend on where the tumor is located. When a meningioma grows in the brain, it can press on nearby tissue and cause certain symptoms.
Common symptoms may include:
Thinking and mood symptoms may include:
Rarely, a meningioma forms in the spine. Symptoms of meningiomas in the spine may include:
What this means for you: Symptoms can be slow to start and vary based on where the tumor sits. Some people have few or no symptoms for a long time. If symptoms change or keep getting worse, your healthcare team can help figure out what's going on.
Most symptoms of a meningioma develop slowly, but sometimes the tumor needs care right away.
Often, meningiomas don't cause any symptoms that you notice and are found only on imaging scans done for other reasons.
Seek emergency care if you have:
Make an appointment with your healthcare professional if you have lasting symptoms that worry you, such as headaches that get worse over time. Even mild or vague symptoms should be checked early to rule out other causes and begin care if needed.
It isn't clear what causes a meningioma. Most people with meningioma don't have a clear cause or inherited condition. Experts know that something changes some cells in the meninges, making them multiply out of control and form a tumor.
What this means for you: Most of the time, there's no clear reason why the tumor started to grow. There isn't a single known cause.
Risk factors for a meningioma include:
Though some reports have suggested a possible link, current research has not found a clear or consistent connection between cellphone use and meningioma.
What this means for you: Most people with meningioma do not have a clear cause. Tell your care team if you had radiation to the head, take hormone-related medicines, or have a family history of NF2 so they can guide testing and follow-up.
A meningioma and its treatment can cause long-term complications. Treatment most often involves surgery and radiation therapy. Possible complications include:
Your care team can treat many of these issues or connect you with rehabilitation specialists, such as physical, occupational or speech therapists, to help improve recovery and quality of life.
Your healthcare professional can treat some complications and refer you to specialists to help you cope with other complications.
What this means for you: Many effects improve over time with rehabilitation, so ask about therapy options. Keep your MRI and follow-up visits, and don't stop medicines without medical advice. Consider safe supportive options such as meditation or gentle massage to help with stress and fatigue.
A meningioma can be hard to diagnose because the tumor is often slow growing. Symptoms may be subtle and thought to be other health conditions or signs of aging. Many meningiomas are found by chance during brain imaging done for other reasons.
If your healthcare professional suspects a meningioma, you may be referred to a doctor who specializes in conditions of the brain and spine, called a neurologist.
Diagnosis usually starts with a review of your medical history and symptoms, followed by a physical and neurological exam. The doctor checks your vision, hearing, balance, coordination, strength and reflexes. If the exam suggests a concern, your care team orders imaging with contrast.
Imaging tests with contrast may include:
Sometimes, a biopsy is done to confirm the tumor type and grade. A biopsy isn't always needed because MRI findings can be enough to suggest a meningioma. When needed, a biopsy provides tissue for study under a microscope to confirm the diagnosis and grade.
Histology means how the tumor cells look under a microscope. A biopsy allows the lab to study these cells and assign a grade based on the World Health Organization (WHO) classification system. Grade 1 cells look more organized and usually grow slowly. Grades 2 and 3 have more active or irregular cells that are more likely to come back after treatment.
Imaging can suggest a meningioma, but only a biopsy — looking at tumor cells under a microscope — can confirm the tumor type and grade. The pathology report helps predict how fast the tumor may grow and guides the care plan.
What this means for you: Histology and grade help the care team choose next steps. Many grade 1 tumors can be managed with surgery or observation. Grade 2 and 3 tumors are more likely to need added treatment, such as radiation, to lower the chance of the tumor returning. In some cases targeted therapies and clinical trials are an option.
The goals of meningioma treatment are to control manage the tumor, protect neurological function and maintain quality of life. Decisions are based on what the tumor looks like on scans, the WHO grade from the lab, and your health and personal preferences. A team that may include specialists in neurology, neurosurgery, radiation oncology, neuroradiology and neuropathology works together to guide your care.
Meningiomas don't all need the same approach. Some can be safely watched, some are best treated with surgery first, and some benefit from radiation either instead of surgery or after it. Your care team reviews your MRI and biopsy results, talks through benefits and risks, and helps you choose the plan that fits your goals.
Meningioma treatment depends on several factors:
These details help your care team decide whether the best approach is observation, surgery, radiation or a combination.
Not everyone needs treatment right away. A small, slow-growing meningioma that isn't causing symptoms may not need intervention.
This approach, known as observation or active surveillance, involves regular imaging and follow-up visits to watch for changes in the tumor or symptoms. If scans later show the tumor is growing or causing symptoms, your care team may recommend surgery or radiation.
When the tumor causes symptoms or grows, surgery is often the first step. Surgeons remove as much tumor as safely possible.
After surgery:
Surgery risks include bleeding or infection. Procedures near the optic nerve may affect vision.
Because meningiomas can grow in many parts of the brain and skull, surgeons use different approaches to reach and safely remove them. The goal is always to take out as much of the tumor as possible while protecting healthy tissue. Your team may use:
Each technique has benefits and risks depending on the tumor's size and closeness to vital nerves or blood vessels.
| Tumor location | Treatment and outlook |
|---|---|
|
Frontal lobe |
Usually easier to reach. Full removal often leads to good recovery and low chance of coming back. |
|
Bone near the eye, called the sphenoid wing |
May need surgery plus focused radiation if full removal could affect vision. Treatment often controls growth while protecting vision. |
|
Deep skull area near the brainstem, called the petroclival region |
Complete removal may not be safe. Partial removal can lower the risk of nerve or brainstem injury and often controls growth. |
|
Midline of the brain, called the parasagittal or falx |
Surgeons remove as much as is safe while protecting blood flow. Careful surgery often leads to long-term control of tumor growth. |
|
Outer surface of the brain, called the convexity |
Often easy to reach. Surgery can usually remove the tumor completely, which often leads to good long-term control of tumor growth. |
|
Spine or spinal cord |
Often easy to reach. Surgery can often remove the tumor completely, leading to good long-term control of tumor growth. |
|
Large veins in the brain, called the venous sinuses |
Complete removal may not be safe. Partial removal plus radiation can control tumor growth. |
Recovery from meningioma surgery is different for everyone. Healing can take weeks to months depending on size and location. Early movement, physical therapy and follow-up visits aid recovery.
Radiation may follow surgery or serve as primary therapy when the tumor can't be safely removed. It destroys remaining cells, lowers recurrence risk, and can improve long-term survival.
Types of radiation used to treat meningioma may include:
Medicines are sometimes used after surgery and radiation if any tumor cells remain or the tumor grows back. They're also considered when surgery or radiation isn't possible. Most meningiomas don't respond well to standard chemotherapy, so drug treatment is usually part of a clinical trial. Researchers are studying targeted drugs that act on tumor growth signals.
These are some of the medicines studied so far for meningioma:
What this means for you: If the tumor grows after surgery and radiation, your care team may discuss clinical trials for targeted drugs or immunotherapy that match the tumor's biology.
| Tumor grade | Typical treatment approach |
|---|---|
| Grade 1 | Observation, surgery if needed, then follow-up imaging |
| Grade 2 | Surgery, radiation, then regular MRI follow-up |
| Grade 3 | Surgery, radiation, then ongoing monitoring or clinical trials |
Alternative and complementary therapies don't treat meningioma tumors. But they can help with stress, sleep, pain, nausea and mood during or after treatment. They should be used alongside your medical care, not instead of it.
There are many types of alternative medicine. Here's how each type may help:
Tell your care team about any therapy you plan to try so they can check for safety with surgery, radiation or medicines. Avoid deep tissue massage over radiation areas or recent surgery sites.
Skip herbs or supplements unless your care team approves. Some can interact with medicines or affect bleeding risk.
If you have headaches that can't be controlled, new vision changes, new weakness or new seizures, seek medical care first.
Delay acupuncture or massage if you have low platelets, active infection or open wounds.
Look for licensed professionals who have experience with people who have brain or spine tumors. Ask them about their training, infection control, and how they coordinate with your care team.
What this means for you: Supportive care can make treatment more comfortable and daily life easier. Use these options to help manage side effects and stress. Check in with your care team to choose what's safe and helpful for you.
A meningioma diagnosis can disrupt your life. You have visits to doctors and surgeons as you prepare for your treatment. To help you cope, try to:
Learn all you can about meningiomas. Ask your healthcare team where you can learn more about meningiomas and your treatment options. Visit your local library and ask a librarian to help you find good sources of information, including online sources.
Write down questions to ask at your next appointment with your healthcare professional. The more you know about your condition, the better able you'll be to decide about your treatment.
Build a support network. It can help to have someone to talk with about your feelings. Other people who can support you include social workers and psychologists. Ask your healthcare professional to refer you. Talk with your pastor, rabbi or other spiritual leader.
It also can help to talk with other people with meningiomas. Think about joining a support group, either in person or online. Ask your healthcare team about brain tumor or meningioma support groups in your area. Or contact the American Brain Tumor Association.
Take care of yourself. Eat a diet rich in fruits and vegetables. Get moderate exercise daily if your healthcare professional OKs it. Get enough sleep to feel rested.
Reduce stress in your life. Focus on what matters to you. These measures won't cure your meningioma. But they may help you feel better as you recover from surgery or help you cope during radiation therapy.
You can start by seeing your main healthcare professional. From there, you may be referred to specialists who treat brain conditions, such as neurologists and neurosurgeons.
Here's some information to help you prepare for your appointment.
Preparing a list of questions will help you make the most of your time. For a meningioma, some basic questions to ask include:
Be sure to ask all the questions you have.
A meningioma's outlook depends on its grade, size and location. The grade shows how fast the cells grow and how likely the tumor is to return. Age and overall health also affect long-term survival.
Many people live long lives after treatment. Grade 1 meningiomas are benign. They grow slowly and can often be fully removed.
Data shows that 97% of children and young adults and 86% of older adults are alive five years after diagnosis. Ten years after diagnosis, survival remains high — about 80% to 97% depending on age.
| WHO Grade | Typical behavior and outcomes |
|---|---|
| Grade 1 | Grows slowly and is often cured with surgery; about 90% are alive 5 years after diagnosis. |
| Grade 2 | Grows faster and returns more often; about 80% are alive at 5 years and about 66% at 10 years. |
| Grade 3 | Rare and more aggressive; about 58% of people are alive 5 years after diagnosis, including about 66% of females and 47% of males. |
Several factors shape survival with meningioma. Some can be improved with treatment choices, while others depend on the tumor itself. Factors can include:
About 20% to 30% of grade 2 meningiomas and 70% to 80% of grade 3 meningiomas return within 10 years. Regular imaging and full removal lower that risk.
Follow-up imaging is key: MRIs every few months at first, then less often over time. If a tumor comes back, additional surgery or radiation can still provide many good years of life.
What this means for you: Most people with meningioma, especially grade 1, live many years without or after treatment. Higher grade tumors need closer monitoring and sometimes combined treatments. But outcomes continue to improve as surgery and radiation techniques advance.
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