During the process of differentiation, genotypic changes are laid down in the genetic apparatus of the future Monocyte, which morphologically will not differ from a normal bone marrow cell. The acquisition of genotypic changes in nuclear DNA for a Monocyte is not decisive in the possibility of transformation into a malignant stem cell, because it can divide, mature, differentiate, transform into cells of the microenvironment, and transform into a Macrophage. And although irreversible genotypic changes are an absolute necessity for transformation into a malignant stem cell, this is completely insufficient. Genotypic changes in the DNA of the Monocyte nucleus will wait patiently until optimal conditions arise for their manifestation, and then the nascent descendants malignant stem cells will dominate the host organism.