Posterior cranial fossa tumours

Last revised by Henry Knipe on 20 Sep 2023

Posterior cranial fossa tumours have a very different differential in an adult as opposed to a child.

Adult

An important space-occupying lesion (the most common in fact) to remember is that of a stroke, which when subacute can mimic a tumour. 

Child

A quick and handy mnemonic for posterior fossa tumours in children is BEAM.

Although it is true that posterior fossa tumours are much more common in children than in adults the distribution does vary with age 2:

  • 0 to 3 years of age: supratentorial > infratentorial

  • 4 to 10 years of age: infratentorial > supratentorial

  • 10 to early adulthood: infratentorial = supratentorial

  • adults: supratentorial > infratentorial

Overall 50-55% of all brain tumours in children are found in the posterior fossa 3.

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