The chance of liver cancer being misdiagnosed as hepatic hemangioma is very small, and there is no accurate scientific data as to what the chance of misdiagnosis is. Liver cancer is a disease caused by malignant tumor in the liver; while hepatic hemangioma is a benign tumor of the liver. Although hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic hemangioma are both liver tumors, there are significant differences between the two diseases, which can be diagnosed and differentiated through various examinations, so it is rare to misdiagnose hepatocellular carcinoma as hepatic hemangioma. For example, through ultrasonography, hepatic hemangioma has the characteristics of slow growth, clear boundary, deformation by pressure for larger tumors, and soft mass, while hepatocellular carcinoma tends to have irregular and unclear boundary, and cause obvious extrusion to the surrounding pipeline system. All in all, liver cancer can be clearly diagnosed through comprehensive examination, and usually there is no misdiagnosis. Patients should go to regular hospitals in time and combine with imaging and other examinations to make a comprehensive judgment so as to avoid delaying the condition.