Male circumcision, a surgery so
ancient it was first written onto the stone tomb walls of Egyptian pharaohs,
is gaining urgent new attention here among doctors battling a modern-
day African plague.
A growing body of evidence sug- gests that surgical removal
of the foreskin, a common rite of passage in western Africa but rarer in the
AIDS-stricken southern and eastern African nations, could significantly
reduce the odds that a boy will one day pick up HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
At the 13th International AIDS Conference yesterday, researchers compared
notes and, for the first time at the highly influential meeting, debated the
merits of adding male circumcision to the list of HIV prevention measures.
Scientists presented conflicting but intriguing data. Several studies
suggest that male circumcision might cut the risk of HIV infection in half
--an extraordinary result that is comparable to the benefits expected from
some future vaccines.
Scientists who are more skeptical believe the benefits attributed to
circumcision, which is a ritual of the Muslim and Jewish faiths, actually
may be the result of other cultural and behavioral factors, such as Muslim
traditions of abstinence from alcohol and genital washing before regular
prayers.
But many top scientists are becoming convinced that the evidence of a
protective effect is compelling. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S.
National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, said in an
interview that he believes the link between male circumcision and lower HIV
infection rates is now ``an absolute fact.''
The link might never have come up but for the work of a determined band
of specialists who call themselves medical anthropologists. Unlike
laboratory bench scientists, they study human behavior and cultural
practices in the field.
In 1989, anthropologist Priscilla Reining drew up a map of African
cities, marking those where the male population is circumcised and those
where it is not. She placed atop it another map of HIV infection rates. The
results were startling: Almost everywhere that AIDS rates were spiraling out
of control, the men were uncircumcised.
``The foreskin itself provides a route for transmission of the virus,''
said Reining, 77, of Washington, D.C., now retired from the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. ``If it's gone, the route is
gone.''
Other studies seem to support that conclusion. In November, University of
California at San Francisco anthropologist Daniel Halperin and Robert Bailey
of the University of Illinois published an article in the influential
British journal The Lancet demanding that scientists pay attention to 10
years of data that had been quietly accumulating on circumcision and HIV.
Twenty-seven of 38 studies had found ``significant associations'' between
the lack of male circumcision and HIV infection. Only one study found the
reverse effect.
Bailey calculated that in cultures where circumcision rates are low, up
to 55 percent of HIV infections could be attributed to lack of circumcision.
``If you can have a public health measure that reduces infection or illness
by 25 percent to 30 percent, that is considered to be a very successful
intervention,'' Bailey said. ``We're talking about a 50 percent reduction.
That is huge by public health standards.''
The renewed interest in circumcision for AIDS prevention, however, comes
at a time when American baby boomers are abandoning the procedure for their
own children. Support for the medical benefits has been eroding for decades.
In 1971, the American Academy of Pediatrics declared there were ``no valid
medical indications'' for infant circumcision.
The push to promote circumcision as an AIDS prevention measure in
developing countries has outraged anti-circumcision advocates, including
NOCIRC, a San Anselmo group that maintains that circumcision is a brutal
procedure justified in America by sloppy science.
``The scare tactics are always consistent with the dreaded disease of the
times,'' said Marilyn Milos, founder of NOCIRC. ``There was a penile cancer
scare in the '30s; a cervical cancer scare in the '50s; and the sexually
transmitted disease scare of the '60s.''
Author David Gollaher, who dubbed circumcision ``the world's most
controversial surgery'' in his medical history of the procedure, said the
case for an HIV link is simply not strong enough.
``This whole argument has surfaced in America, a nation with one of the
highest circumcision rates, and also the highest HIV rate in the
industrialized world,'' he said. Gollaher noted that circumcision rates are
low in Europe, and so are HIV infection rates.
But Halperin notes there are also biological reasons that suggest the
foreskin is particularly vulnerable to HIV. The thin, fragile tissue of the
foreskin can tear and bleed during sex, providing a point of entry for the
virus.
The most significant link may be that the foreskin is particularly rich
in a kind of white blood cell, known as Langerhans' cells, which serve as
sentries in the body's immune system. Recent research confirms that they
lodge in great numbers in the soft mucous-covered tissue of the foreskin,
vagina and cervix. But HIV has been found to have a special affinity for
Langerhans' cells.
Instead of protecting, Langerhans' cells become a gateway for HIV
infection. Men who become infected in a sexual encounter with a prostitute
or girlfriend will subsequently infect their wives. In this fashion,
researchers believe, noncircumcising cultures may become especially
vulnerable to a heterosexual HIV epidemic.
If that is the case, it is especially grim news for noncircumcising
societies such as India and China, which may be at the start of an
African-style heterosexual epidemic.
The most convincing evidence to date comes from a Johns Hopkins
University study in the Rakai district of southern Uganda, where couples who
were serodiscordant -- meaning that one partner was infected by HIV and the
other was not -- were monitored during a 2 1/2-year period.
One arm of the study looked at men who were HIV-negative, but whose wives
or girlfriends were already infected. At the end of the study period, 40 of
the 137 uncircumcised men whose sexual partners were HIV positive also
became infected with the virus. But among a group of 50 men who were
circumcised, not one contracted the virus.
Proponents seized on the Rakai study results, which were presented here
yesterday, as evidence of circumcision's protective effect, but the
investigators themselves remained skeptical.
Dr. Ronald Gray presented data yesterday suggesting that the behavior
factors associated with Islam -- most of the circumcised men in the study
were Muslim -- may account for about half the protective effect. The
protective effect among the non-Muslim circumcised men did not reach
statistical significance. ``It is not wise to promote circumcision in the
absence of evidence from randomized trials,'' he said.
Still, for circumcision proponents, the newfound attention is welcome.
For years, they say, evidence of a link between the lack of male
circumcision and skyrocketing HIV rates has been routinely ducked, dismissed
or ignored.
``It's fascinating that the one intervention that is simple, apparently
effective, cheap and lifelong is the one most violently opposed by men in
this field,'' said Brian Williams, a South African AIDS researcher who is
studying the disease in the mining communities west of Johannesburg. ``There
is a strange reluctance even to discuss it.''
Even if the link between circumcision and lower HIV rates were well
established, public health officials would still face significant cultural
and social challenges promoting it in places where it is not practiced,
people on both sides of the debate agree.
UC San Francisco anthropologist Halperin, a forceful advocate for
circumcision for HIV prevention, said the procedure makes some people
uncomfortable because it stirs up images of religious and tribal identity,
topics that frighten people in politically unstable regions.
``Circumcision is too human a solution,'' he said. ``It's funky. It's
tribal. It's not modern medicine. It is not coming in with a pill.''
Jane Chege, a researcher for the Population Council in Kenya, said she
has been accused of ``tribal imperialism'' for advocating circumcision among
the Luo tribe in Kisumu, a city in the western part of the nation hardest
hit by AIDS.
But Chege, a member of the majority Kikuyu tribe, believes the findings
about the link between circumcision and HIV rates among the Luo are too
important to overlook.
``This is a big issue. It is not something you can just ignore,'' she
said. ``Even a 5 percent difference in HIV rates is significant, because we
are talking about a killer.''
CIRCUMCISION AND HIV RATES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Infection rates are much lower in western African nations,
where circumcision is common, than in south and eastern African
nations, where circumcision is more rare.
Rates of HIV infection
are shown in percent, in nations where:
Less than 20% of males are circumsised
More than 80% of males are circumsised
Source: The Lancet
*Without the largely
non-circumsising Kisumu region, with an HIV rate of 34.9%, the
national rate for Kenya would be about 8%.
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