Wednesday, July 27, 2005
By Charlene
Laino
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| Circumcision
may protect against infection with the virus that causes
AIDS.
In a study of more than 3,000 young men, those who were
circumcised were 65 percent less likely to be infected with
HIV compared with those who were not circumcised.
"Circumcision prevented 6 to 7 out of 10 potential HIV
infections," says researcher Bertran Auvert, MD, MPH,
professor of public health at the University of
Versailles-Saint Quentin in France.
Circumcision was so effective at preventing HIV
transmission that the trial was stopped early so that all the
young men in the study could be offered the procedure, he
tells WebMD.
The study included 3,128 uncircumcised young men aged 18 to
24 in a rural area outside of Johannesburg, South Africa. The
men were randomly assigned either to undergo the procedure or
remain uncircumcised. All the men were heterosexual.
By about 1 1/2 years later, 51 men who had not been
circumcised had been infected with HIV, compared with only 18
who had the procedure, the study showed.
The findings were presented at a meeting of the
International AIDS Society.
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Too Soon to Recommend Widespread
Circumcision
Doctors have long noticed that circumcised men appeared to
be at lower risk of HIV infection. But this is the first time
that the observation has been confirmed in a well-designed
study in which half the men got the procedure and the other
half didn't, according to researchers at the meeting.
"These are very exciting new data on the potential of male
circumcision to reduce the risk of HIV transmission," says
Helene Gayle, MD, president of the International AIDS Society
and director for HIV, TB and Reproductive Health at the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation.
But until the findings are confirmed in other ongoing
studies, "it would be premature to recommend widespread
circumcision for HIV prevention," she tells WebMD.
Gayle also cautions that men who are circumcised should not
develop a false sense of security and use it as an excuse for
unsafe sex or other risky behaviors.
Auvert agrees that questions remain. For example, doctors
don't yet know if circumcision can help protect against
male-to-male transmission of HIV or whether the findings will
hold up over the long term.
But if confirmed, the implications are enormous, he
says.
Last year, there were 5 million new HIV infections
worldwide -- more than in any other year.
More Than 1 Million Americans
Living With HIV
Visit WebMD's HIV/AIDS Health Center
By Charlene Laino, reviewed by
Michael W. Smith, MD
SOURCES: 3rd IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis and
Treatment, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 24-27, 2005. Bertran
Auvert, MD, MPH, professor of public health, University of
Versailles, France. Helene Gayle, MD, president of the
International AIDS Society; director for HIV, TB and
Reproductive Health at the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation. |