Search
Advanced Search
Metrics info
Average Rating (0 User Ratings)
    • Currently 0/5 Stars.
    Rate This Article
Share this Article info
  • StumbleUpon Facebook Connotea CiteULike Bibliography
Public Library of Science

Open Access

Correspondence

The Protective Effect of Male Circumcision as a Faith Lift for the Troubled Paradigm of HIV Epidemiology in Sub-Saharan Africa

John J. Potterat1*, Devon D. Brewer2, Stephen Q. Muth3, Stuart Brody4

1 Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States of America, 2 Interdisciplinary Scientific Research and University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America, 3 Quintus-ential Solutions, Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States of America, 4 University of Paisley, Paisley, United Kingdom

Auvert and colleagues present preliminary evidence for the protective effect of male circumcision on HIV acquisition [1]. Their report also reveals several problems with the widely held assumption that penile–vaginal sex accounts for the overwhelming majority of HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa.

We are baffled that the factor most strongly associated with incident HIV infection—attendance at “a clinic for a health problem related to the genitals” (rate ratio, 5.7)—is neither highlighted nor specifically discussed. Given evidence for increased risk of acquiring HIV from treatment for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in sub-Saharan Africa (relative to untreated STDs) [2], such a context for HIV acquisition should have been more assiduously explored, especially regarding nosocomial transmission.

Regrettably, the authors did not control for blood exposures (e.g., other types of medical or dental care, including care from “street doctors” and village injectionists, injections with syringes kept at home, ritualistic procedures, and injection drug use). Nor did they assess anal intercourse, the variable most strongly associated with sexual transmission of HIV. Anal intercourse is not uncommon in sub-Saharan Africa [3]. The authors also did not ask participants to specify the sex of their nonspousal partners, despite much evidence for bisexual behavior on the part of many “heterosexual” men in sub-Saharan Africa [3].

Furthermore, the authors did not report the relationship between level of condom use and HIV incidence. The need for more detailed investigation of sexual exposures is underlined by the negligible associations between such traditional measures of sexual risk—any type of unprotected sex, the number of sexual exposures (“contacts”), and the number of nonspousal partners—and HIV incidence [1]. Indeed, these results replicate the frequent lack of association between sexual behavior variables and HIV incidence or epidemic trajectories in sub-Saharan Africa [4]. (The authors should also report HIV incidence in persons reporting no sexual activity during specified study intervals.) Of concern as well is the high per coital act–HIV transmission probability implied by the data presented. A high transmission probability would suggest that the HIV prevalence in their participants should be greater than the 4%–5% observed at baseline.

Until all modes of HIV transmission—by sex and by puncturing—are comprehensively investigated [5, 6], the most effective means of preventing HIV transmission will remain shrouded. In light of the anomalies and lacunae in Auvert and colleagues' study, the protective effect of male circumcision they observed amounts to a faith lift for the empirically beleaguered paradigm of heterosexual HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa [7].

References Top

  1. Auvert B, Taljaard D, Lagarde E, Sobngwi-Tambekou J, Sitta R, et al. (2005) Randomized, controlled intervention trial of male circumcision for reduction of HIV infection risk: The ANRS 1265 trial. PLoS Med 2: e298. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0020298.
  2. Gisselquist D, Potterat JJ, Brody S, Vachon F (2003) Let it be sexual: How health care transmission of AIDS in Africa was ignored. Int J STD AIDS 14: 148–161. Find this article online
  3. Brody S, Potterat JJ (2003) Assessing the role of anal intercourse in the epidemiology of AIDS in Africa. Int J STD AIDS 14: 431–436. Find this article online
  4. Potterat JJ, Gisselquist D, Brody S (2004) Still not understanding the uneven spread of HIV within Africa. Sex Transm Dis 31: 365. Find this article online
  5. Brody S, Potterat JJ (2004) Establishing valid AIDS monitoring and research in countries with generalized epidemics. Int J STD AIDS 15: 1–6. Find this article online
  6. Brewer DD, Rothenberg RB, Potterat JJ, Brody S, Gisselquist D (2004) HIV epidemiology in Africa: Rich in conjecture, poor in data. Int J STD AIDS 15: 63–65. Find this article online
  7. Brewer DD, Brody S, Drucker E, Gisselquist D, Minkin SF, et al. (2003) Mounting anomalies in the epidemiology of HIV in Africa: Cry the beloved paradigm. Int J STD AIDS 14: 1. Find this article online
Post Your Note (For Public Viewing)
Compose Your Note
 
Declare any competing interests.

Notes and Corrections can include the following markup tags:

Emphasis: ''italic''  '''bold'''  '''''bold italic'''''

Other: ^^superscript^^  ~~subscript~~

Add a note to this text.
Please follow our guidelines for notes and comments and review our competing interests policy. Comments that do not conform to our guidelines will be promptly removed and the user account disabled. The following must be avoided:
  • Remarks that could be interpreted as allegations of misconduct
  • Unsupported assertions or statements
  • Inflammatory or insulting language
Add a note to this text.
You must be logged in to add a note to an article. You may log in by clicking here or cancel this note.
Add a note to this text.
You cannot annotate this area of the document. Close
Add a note to this text.
You cannot create an annotation that spans different sections of the document; please adjust your selection.
Close
Rate This Article
Please follow our guidelines for rating and review our competing interests policy. Comments that do not conform to our guidelines will be promptly removed and the user account disabled. The following must be avoided:
  1. Remarks that could be interpreted as allegations of misconduct
  2. Unsupported assertions or statements
  3. Inflammatory or insulting language
Compose Your Annotation
 
Declare any competing interests.

Ratings can include the following markup tags:

Emphasis: ''italic''  '''bold'''  '''''bold italic'''''

Other: ^^superscript^^  ~~subscript~~

All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.