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In a huge mass of works on the so-called Mitogenetic effect (MGE, see [Gurwitsch, 1934]), a separate group was focusing on cancer diagnostics [Pesochensky, 1942; Gurwitsch et al., 1947]. According to a number of works [Zorin, 1930; Zalkind et al, 1930], whole blood and blood serum of young, healthy and well bread animals (and people) were good inducers of MGE. Blood of old or exhausted animals and people, was no MGE inducer [Potockaya & Tzoglina, 1932], as well as blood of cancer patients [Pesochensky, 1942]. An important fact shown in [Pesochensky, 1942], was that blood of animals with stimulated cancerogenesis (with chemical cancerogenes, by tumor transplantation, or injection of suspension of malignant cells) stopped to be MGE inducer BEFORE malignant process could be diagnosed clinically and ONLY in those cases when it was to be diagnosed later. Compliant results were obtained in clinic [Pesochensky, 1942], showing that blood of women with myoma stopped to be MGE inducer ONLY in those cases when they were to get cancer later, and BEFORE cancer could be diagnosed by any other means. The lacking of MGE from blood was actually not an utterly specific indicator of cancer. What was really specific for cancer patients, was a strange capacity of their blood to inhibit MGE from other inducers (added to the inducer) [Gurwitsch et al., 1947]. A special substance responsible for this effect, was shown in blood of cancer patients and called “cancer quencher”. Thus the effect of quenching MGE from other inducers, produced by blood, could be used as a leading indicator of malignant processes.