Orbital
Orbital Tumors
Diagnosis and surgical management of orbital tumors and masses — adult and pediatric, benign and malignant.
Medically reviewed by Noel D. Saks, MDOculoplastic SurgeonLast updated June 2026
Orbital
Diagnosis and surgical management of orbital tumors and masses — adult and pediatric, benign and malignant.
Medically reviewed by Noel D. Saks, MDOculoplastic SurgeonLast updated June 2026
The orbit is a bony cavity approximately 30 mL in volume that houses the eye, six extraocular muscles, the optic nerve, fat, lacrimal gland, and a rich network of blood vessels and nerves. A tumor — any space-occupying lesion, benign or malignant — within this confined space produces characteristic signs by displacing or compressing orbital contents.
Most orbital tumors are benign. The clinical priority is accurate characterization — imaging-guided diagnosis avoids unnecessary surgery for lesions that can be observed, while ensuring timely biopsy and treatment for malignancies. Complex orbital tumors requiring neurosurgical or skull-base approaches are managed in coordination with neurosurgical colleagues.
For a detailed guide to orbital anatomy, see our dedicated Orbital Anatomy page.
Anatomy
The orbit is a ~30 mL bony cone holding the eye, six muscles, the optic nerve, fat and the lacrimal gland. A growing tumor has nowhere to expand, so it pushes the eye forward (proptosis) or to the side, and can press on the optic nerve.
How they are evaluated
MRI is best for soft-tissue tumors and the optic nerve; CT shows bone and calcification. Growth rate, location and the patient’s age narrow the diagnosis — many are confirmed with a biopsy.
Adult — most common
Cavernous venous malformation (the most common adult orbital tumor), lymphoma, lacrimal-gland tumors, solitary fibrous tumor, schwannoma/neurofibroma and sphenoid-wing meningioma. See adult tumors →
Pediatric — most common
Infantile (capillary) hemangioma, dermoid cyst, lymphatic malformation (lymphangioma) and rhabdomyosarcoma — the most urgent. See pediatric tumors →
Orbital tumors produce symptoms by displacing the eye or compressing orbital structures. The direction of displacement helps localize the lesion:
Urgent evaluation: Any rapidly progressive proptosis, vision loss, or pain requires prompt CT/MRI imaging and orbital evaluation. Childhood orbital masses deserve urgent assessment — rhabdomyosarcoma grows in days to weeks.
Diagnosis combines the clinical picture with imaging and, when needed, a biopsy. The patient’s age, the rate of progression, and the presence or absence of pain are powerful clues: a slowly enlarging, painless mass in an adult suggests a benign lesion such as a cavernous venous malformation, whereas a rapidly growing mass — especially in a child — demands urgent evaluation for malignancy.
Imaging is the cornerstone:
Characteristic patterns often suggest the diagnosis before biopsy — a well-circumscribed intraconal mass (cavernous malformation), soft tissue that “molds” around structures without eroding bone (lymphoma), bony hyperostosis (meningioma), or frank bone destruction (adenoid cystic carcinoma, metastasis).
Biopsy is performed when the diagnosis is uncertain or tissue is needed to guide treatment. Diffuse or infiltrative lesions and suspected lymphoma are sampled by incisional biopsy (lymphoma also needs systemic staging). Well-encapsulated lesions are usually removed whole (excisional). Some lesions should not be biopsied piecemeal — a suspected pleomorphic adenoma of the lacrimal gland is excised intact with its capsule, because rupture risks recurrence and malignant change. Inflammatory presentations get a targeted laboratory workup (including serum IgG4, ANCA, and ACE).
Age and growth rate narrow the differential before any biopsy. The table shows the most common benign and malignant tumors by age group — follow any entry to its full description on the adult or pediatric page.
| Most common benign | Most common malignant | |
|---|---|---|
| Adults | Cavernous venous malformation (“cavernous hemangioma”) | Orbital lymphoma |
| Children | Dermoid cyst (orbital) · capillary hemangioma (periocular) | Rhabdomyosarcoma — an emergency |
Most common in adults
Most common in children
Not every orbital mass is a tumor. These related conditions can mimic or accompany orbital tumors:
Because the orbit is a closed bony space, a growing mass shows itself by displacing the eye. Signs that warrant imaging include progressive bulging of one eye (proptosis), double vision, a palpable lump, pain, or reduced/dimmed vision from pressure on the optic nerve. New or asymmetric proptosis should always be evaluated.
Diagnosis relies on CT and MRI to locate the mass, define its relationship to the optic nerve and muscles, and narrow the differential. Some lesions have a characteristic appearance; others require a biopsy. The most common non-tumor cause of proptosis is thyroid eye disease, which must always be excluded.
Management depends on the diagnosis: observation for stable benign lesions, complete surgical excision for well-defined benign tumors such as cavernous hemangioma, and biopsy followed by tailored therapy (surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, or systemic treatment) for lymphoma and malignancies. Removal is performed through an orbitotomy chosen to reach the tumor with the least disturbance to the eye.
Orbital surgery sits at the center of oculoplastic subspecialty practice; an ASOPRS fellowship-trained orbital surgeon works alongside radiology and oncology when needed. Find one in our surgeon directory.
Schedule a consultation with Noel D. Saks, MD to learn if this procedure is right for you.