Global AIDS - India

Uncircumcised Indian men have 8 times higher HIV risk

From: Bulletin@nam.org.uk
To: AIDS-INDIA@yahoogroups.com
October 15, 2003


Uncircumcised men have an 8 fold higher risk of becoming infected with HIV compared to circumcised men, according to a study of 2298 Indian men presented on Thursday at the 41st Annual Meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America by Dr Steven Reynolds of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.

The research was part of a larger study investigating risk factors for HIV-1 infection based on men attending one of three STD clinics in Pune, India. Between 1993 and 2000, 2,298 men who tested negative for HIV-1 were enrolled in the study. During subsequent visits (an average of three visits in 11 months), 2 of 191 men who were circumcised and 165 of 2,107 who were uncircumcised tested positive for HIV.

Demographics, sexual risk behaviours (including having sex with a prostitute), and condom use were remarkably similar between both groups, said Dr Reynolds. Despite the similarity in risk profiles, researchers determined the incidence rate of HIV-1 among circumcised men was 0.7 percent, whereas among uncircumcised men it was 5.5 percent, an 8-fold increase. The relative risk of infection among circumcised men, after adjusting for calendar year, age group, level of education, marital status, living with family, multiple sex partners, sex worker partners, condom use, tattoos and medical injections, was 0.12 (p=0.003).

However, the study did not find circumcision to be protective against other sexually transmitted diseases, including syphilis, genital herpes and gonorrhoea.

The findings suggest the benefit of circumcision may be biological rather than due to other factors, such as difference in behaviour between circumcised and uncircumcised men, or the possibility that circumcision promotes the acquisition of sexually transmitted infections, said Dr. Reynolds. The inner surface of the foreskin is not as thickly "keratinised" as the outside or other surfaces of the penis, meaning it has less of a protective layer and may be more easily penetrated by HIV, he said. It also has higher numbers of the cells that HIV infects, possibly contributing to the reduced risk of HIV infection observed when the foreskin is removed.

There are other potential methods uncircumcised men may be able to use to protect themselves against HIV, said Dr Reynolds. In the future, a topical microbicide product might be applied to the foreskin before sex to protect against HIV. Such products are in development.

Circumcision isn't totally protective and may not be culturally acceptable or safe in some settings, so regular condom use is still the best way of protecting against HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, said Dr Reynolds. Condom promotion remains a key strategy in the current fight against the spread of AIDS, he said.

Circumcision as a potential prevention strategy requires confirmation by randomised clinical trials, which are the gold standard in evaluating medical interventions, he said. There currently are clinical trials underway in Uganda, Kenya and South Africa.

Reference.

Reynolds SJ et al. Male circumcision is protective against HIV-1 but not other common sexually transmitted infections in India.

41st Annual Conference of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, San Diego, 2003.
http://www.aidsmap.com./news/newsdisplay2.asp?/newsId=2350

The following is the reply for a request for further details of this study. Moderator

Dear Mr Thomas,

With regard to the article, Uncircumcised Indian men have 8 times higher HIV risk, it has not been published and was presented at the IDSA meeting last week. We will not be releasing further details prior to publication. We may be able to provide more information after its publication.
Thank you,
Debra L.Gair
Senior Administrative Assistant
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Division of Infectious Diseases
1830 E. Monument Street, Room 458
Baltimore, MD 21287-0003
(443)287-4098-Ph (443) 287-6440-Fax
dgair1@jhmi.edu

The following was posted on the AIDS-INDIA eForum on October 17, 2003

Subject: AIDS-INDIA. Further Details: Circumcision and Risk of HIV/STIs among Indian Men

Dear Dr. Thomas,

The abstract for the presentation at the Infectious Disease Society of America last week on circumcision and risk of HIV and other STIs can be found at the following site under Session LB-10

http://www.idsociety.org/me/am2003/ABS_LatebreakerOral.pdf

The study is part of an ongoing, 10-year collaboration between Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore Maryland and the National AIDS Research Instititute in Pune.

The association between lack of circumcision and incident HIV infection in this study population has been previously reported in the Indian Journal of Medical Research:

Mehendale SM, Shepherd ME, Divekar AD, Gangakhedkar RR, Kamble SS, Menon PA, Yadav R, Risbud AR, Paranjape RS, Gadkari DA, Quinn TC, Bollinger RC, Rodrigues JJ. Evidence for high prevalence & rapid transmission of HIV among individuals attending STD clinics in Pune, India. Indian J Med Res 1996;104:327-35.

The IDSA presentation included a detailed examination of risk of acquision of other STIs as well as HIV. While a protective trend was found for HSV-2, Syphilis, and Gonorrhoea among circumcised men, the associations were not statistically significant.

This study indicates that uncircumcised men may be more susceptible to infection with HIV, given the same level of exposure, and highlights the need for consistent condom use to protect the vulnerable cells in the foreskin. Definitive evidence of a causal effect await the results of clinical trials underway in 3 countries of Africa.

The 1996 IJMR article was included in a systematic review of Male Circumcision for prevention of heterosexual acquisition of HIV in men just published in the Cochrane Library in July 2003:

Siegfried N, Muller M, Volmink J, Deeks J, Egger M, Low N, Weiss H, Walker S, Williamson P. Male circumcision for prevention of heterosexual acquisition of HIV in men (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 3, 2003. Oxford: Update Software.

I have included the abstract of the Cochrane review below:

Abstract

Background

The findings from observational studies, reviews and meta-analyses, supported by biological theories, that circumcised men appear less likely to acquire human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has contributed to the recent ground swell of support for considering male circumcision as a strategy for preventing sexually acquired infection. We sought to elucidate and appraise the global evidence from published and unpublished studies that circumcision can be used as an intervention to prevent HIV infection.

Objectives

  1. To assess the evidence of an interventional effect of male circumcision for preventing acquisition of HIV-1 and HIV-2 by men through heterosexual intercourse
  2. To examine the feasibility and value of performing individual person data (IPD) meta-analysis

Search Strategy

We searched online for published and unpublished studies in The Cochrane Library (issue 2, 2002), MEDLINE (April 2002), EMBASE (February 2002) and AIDSLINE (August 2001). We also searched databases listing conference abstracts, scanned reference lists of articles and contacted authors of
included studies.

Selection Criteria

We searched for randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials of male circumcision or, in their absence, observational studies that compare acquisition rates of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infection in circumcised and uncircumcised heterosexual men.

Data collection and analysis

Independent reviewers selected studies, assessed study quality and extracted data. We stratified studies based on study design and on whether they included participants from the general population or high-risk groups (such as patients treated for sexually transmitted infections). We expressed findings as crude and adjusted odds ratios (OR) together with their 95% confidence intervals (CI) and conducted a sensitivity analysis to explore the effect of adjustment on study results. We investigated whether the method of circumcision ascertainment influenced study outcomes.

Main Results

We identified no completed randomized controlled trials. Three randomized controlled trials are currently underway or commencing shortly. We found 34 observational studies: 16 conducted in the general population and 18 in high-risk populations. It seems unlikely that potential confounding factors were completely accounted for in any of the included studies. In particular, important risk factors, such as religion and sexual practices, were not adequately accounted for in many of the included studies.

General Population Study Results

The single cohort study (N = 5516) showed a significant difference in HIV transmission rates between circumcised and uncircumcised men [OR = 0.58; 95% CI: 0.36 to 0.96]. Results for the 14 cross-sectional studies were inconsistent, with point estimates for unadjusted odds ratios varying between 0.28 and 1.73. Six studies had statistically significant results, four in the direction of benefit and two in the direction of harm. The test for heterogeneity between the cross-sectional studies was highly significant (chi-square = 77.59; df = 13; P-value < 0.00001). Nine studies reported adjusted odds ratios with eight in the direction of benefit, ranging from 0.26 to 0.80. Use of adjusted results tended to show stronger evidence of an association although they remained heterogenous (chi-square = 75.2; df = 13; P-value < 0.00001). Only one case-control study was found (N = 51) which had a non-significant result [OR = 1.90; 95% CI: 0.50 to 7.20].

High-Risk Group Study Results

The four cohort studies identified found a protective effect from circumcision with point estimates for unadjusted odds ratios varying from 0.10 to 0.39. Two of these studies had statistically significant results. Two studies reported adjusted odds ratios, both protective with one being significant. The chi-square test for between-study heterogeneity was not significant (chi-square = 5.21; df = 3; P-value = 0.16). All eleven cross-sectional studies reporting unadjusted results found benefit from circumcision, eight of which had statistically significant results. Estimates of effect varied from an unadjusted odds ratio of 0.10 to 0.66. Between-study heterogeneity was significant with the chi-square = 29.77; df = 10; P-value = 0.0009. Four of these studies reported adjusted odds ratios ranging from 0.20 to 0.59 and all were significant. One additional cross-sectional study only reported an adjusted odds ratio in the direction of benefit which was statistically significant.

All three case-control studies found a protective effect of circumcision on HIV status, two being statistically significant. Point estimates varied from unadjusted odds ratios of 0. 37 to 0. 88. One reported an adjusted odds ratio showing a significant protective effect.

Adverse Effects

No studies reported on the adverse effects of circumcision. In most studies, circumcision had taken place during childhood or adolescence before the studies commenced.

Reviewers' conclusions

We found insufficient evidence to support an interventional effect of male circumcision on HIV acquisition in heterosexual men. The results from existing observational studies show a strong epidemiological association between male circumcision and prevention of HIV, especially among high-risk groups. However, observational studies are inherently limited by confounding which is unlikely to be fully adjusted for. In the light of forthcoming results from RCTs, the value of IPD analysis of the included studies is doubtful. The results of these trials will need to be carefully considered before circumcision is implemented as a public health intervention for prevention of sexually transmitted HIV.

With Kind Regards,

Mary Shepherd
Research Associate
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Division of Infectious Diseases
1830 E. Monument Street
Baltimore, MD 21287-0003
E-mail: mes@jhmi.edu

 

 

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