Male circumcision doesn't affect women's HIV
risk
Michael Carter, Friday, August 24, 2007
Male circumcision has “little influence” on a woman’s
HIV risk, according to a study conducted in Uganda and Zimbabwe
published in the August 20th edition of AIDS. However, the study
did show that women with high levels of sexual risk were slightly
less likely to contract HIV if their partners were circumcised,
and the investigators suggest that this finding should be explored
in further studies.
Three randomised controlled trials have now shown that circumcised
men might have a significantly lower risk of HIV infection than
uncircumcised men. It is uncertain, however, if male circumcision
has a protective effect against HIV infection for women. The studies
that have examined this question have so far yielded conflicting
results.
It is biologically plausible that women with circumcised partners
have a lower risk of HIV infection. Uncircumcised men could be
more likely to transmit HIV because the foreskin contains cells
capable of shedding HIV and the foreskin also provides an environment
where microorganisms can grow. Studies have also shown that uncircumcised
men are more likely to have genital ulcers, and the presence of
ulcers can facilitate the transmission of HIV.
In the current study, the effect of male circumcision on women’s
HIV risk was examined by analysing data from the Hormonal Contraception
and the Risk of HIV Acquisition (HC-HIV) study.
Data from 4417 sexually active women aged between 18 –
35-years in Uganda and Zimbabwe were included in the investigators’
analyses. The study population comprised 2,231 Zimbabwean women
(50% of the population) and 1,793 Ugandan women assessed as having
a low HIV risk (41%).
In addition, a further 393 Ugandan women with a high HIV risks,
including patients from sexually transmitted infection clinics,
sex workers, and military wives, were included in the study.
At baseline women were asked to say if their partner was circumcised
or not. Women were also asked to provide details of the circumcision
status of any new sexual partners.
At enrollment structured interviews were also used to obtain
details of the women’s reproductive, contraceptive, and
sexual behaviours. Follow-up visits, including physical examinations
and specimen collection, took place every twelve weeks. All the
women were HIV-negative on enrollment.
Almost three-quarters of the women (3,249, 74%) at baseline reported
that their partner was uncircumcised. A total of 989 (22%) said
their partner was circumcised, and 166 (4%) reported that they
did not know the circumcision status of their partner.
Circumcision was more common amongst the partners of Ugandan
(36%) women then Zimbabwean (9%) women. But Zimbabwean women accounted
for 98% of those who said that they did not know if their partner
was circumcised.
Women with a circumcised partner had a riskier sexual background,
having an earlier mean age of sexual debut (17 years versus 18
years, p < 0.001), a higher number of mean life-time sexual
partners (five versus three, p < 0.001), and a higher mean
number of nights when their partner was away from home in the
last month (nine versus six, p < 0.001).
The median duration of follow-up was 23 months.
Consistent with the baseline findings, women partnered with circumcised
partners had higher levels of sexual risk during follow-up, being
more likely than women with uncircumcised partners to self-report
a sexually transmitted infection (6% versus 4%, p < 0.001),
have symptoms of a sexually transmitted infection (26% versus
20%, p < 0.001), and to have a risky sexual partner (a man
with symptoms of a sexually transmitted infection, or who was
HIV-positive; 23% versus 14%, p < 0.001). Women with circumcised
partners also had a lower mean number of protected sex acts (8.6
versus 8.3 per month, p < 0.001).
A total of 210 women became infected during follow-up (34 women
with circumcised partners, 167 women with uncircumcised partners,
and nine women who did not know the circumcision status of their
partners). This provided an unadjusted HIV incidence of 2.03 per
100 person years for women with circumcised partners, 2.96 per
100 person years for women with uncircumcised partners, and 3.51
per 100 person years from women who did not know if their partner
was circumcised.
The investigators then performed a number of statistical analyses.
In their first unadjusted model, they found that the risk of HIV
infection was reduced for women with circumcised partners compared
to women whose partners were uncircumcised (HR, 0.69; 95% CI,
0.48 – 0.99). This difference was of border-line statistical
significance (p = 0.06).
But the protective effect of having a circumcised partner weakened
when the investigators adjusted their model to include age, age
at sexual debut, contraceptive use, husband’s employment
status, level of education, and number of sexual partners in the
previous three months (HR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.53 – 1.14, p
value not provided). Further adjustment, taking into account population
subgroups, meant that the protective effect of circumcision disappeared
entirely (HR, 1.03, 95% CI, 0.69 – 1.53).
In further analysis, the women’s HIV risk group was then
taken into consideration. The investigators found that low-risk
Ugandan and Zimbabwean women had a similar risk of HIV infection,
regardless of their partner’s circumcision status. However,
the high-risk Ugandan women derived a non-significant protective
effect from having a circumcised partner (HR 0.16; 95% CI, 0.02
– 1.25).
“After adjustment, we did not observe a significant protective
effect of male circumcision overall…for a small group referred
through high-risk settings, we found a suggestion of a lower HIV
risk for women with circumcised partners,” write the investigators,
adding that the finding for this high-risk subgroup “is
based on few HIV infections (19 total infections, and only two
among women with circumcised partners), and, therefore the suggestion
that male circumcision may be protective for these high-risk women
must be interpreted very tentatively.” Nevertheless, they
conclude that this finding “warrants further investigation.”
Reference
Turner AN et al. Men’s circumcision status and women’s
risk of HIV acquisition in Zimbabwe and Uganda. AIDS 21: 1779
– 1789, 2007.
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