Hepatic hemangioma will not develop into liver cancer, so there is no need to worry too much. Hepatic hemangioma is a common benign tumor of the liver, mainly due to vascular malformation. Most of the patients do not need to deal with hepatic hemangioma for life and only need to be reviewed regularly. A small number of patients with large hepatic hemangioma or hepatic hemangioma growing in special areas need to be controlled by surgery or radiofrequency ablation or arterial embolization. While liver cancer is a malignant tumor growing on the liver, and the high-risk factors for liver cancer include history of hepatitis B, hepatitis C or long-term heavy alcohol consumption, liver hemangioma usually does not induce liver cancer. It is only when both are relatively small in size that imaging may misdiagnose. Patients with hepatic hemangioma usually have no obvious symptoms in the clinic. However, if patients have sudden onset of discomfort such as pain in the liver area, low fever, wasting, jaundice, etc., it is recommended to promptly consult with hepatobiliary surgery to rule out the possibility of misdiagnosis.