A Diagnostic Challenge: Sclerosed Hepatic Haemangioma Mimicking Malignancy (2025)

Type of publication:

Journal article

Author(s):

*Lakhani, Umar A.

Citation:

Cureus. 17(10):e94449, 2025 Oct.

Abstract:

A 75-year-old lady presented to Accident and Emergency (A&E) with acute worsening shortness of breath and new palpitations. On assessment, she was found to have fast atrial fibrillation, signs of heart failure, and bilateral peripheral oedema. Investigations revealed pulmonary embolism and an incidental hepatic lesion on CT imaging, suspicious for malignancy. Multidisciplinary discussion led to liver biopsy, which confirmed a benign sclerosed haemangioma. The patient was managed conservatively for cardiac and thromboembolic complications. This case highlights the difficulty in differentiating sclerosed haemangiomas from malignant liver lesions on imaging alone and underscores the importance of biopsy and multidisciplinary decision-making in elderly patients with comorbidities. Learning points include diagnostic vigilance, safe management of anticoagulation, and avoidance of unnecessary surgery.

DOI: 10.7759/cureus.94449

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