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Circumcision may cut risk of HIV
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Washington -
Circumcising adult men may reduce by half their risk of
getting the AIDS virus through heterosexual intercourse, the U.S.
government announced Wednesday, as it shut down two studies in
Africa testing the link.
The National Institutes of Health
closed the studies in Kenya and Uganda early, when safety monitors
took a look at initial results this week and spotted the protection.
The studies' uncircumcised men are being offered the chance to
undergo the procedure.
The link between male circumcision
and HIV prevention was noted as long ago as the late 1980s. The
first major clinical trial, of 3,000 men in South Africa, found last
year that circumcision cut the HIV risk by 60 percent.
Still, many AIDS specialists had
been awaiting the NIH's results as a final confirmation.
"Male circumcision can lower both
an individual's risk of infection, and hopefully the rate of HIV
spread through the community," said AIDS expert Dr. Anthony Fauci,
director of the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases.
But it's not perfect protection,
Fauci stressed. Men who become circumcised must not quit using
condoms nor take other risks — and circumcision offers no protection
from HIV acquired through anal sex or injection drug use, he noted.
"It's not a magic bullet, but a
potentially important intervention," agreed Dr. Kevin De Cock of the
World Health Organization.
Male circumcision is common at
birth in the United States. But in sub-Saharan Africa, home to more
than half of the world's almost 40 million HIV-infected people,
there are large swaths of populations where male circumcision is
rare.
The WHO plans an international
meeting early next year to discuss the studies' results and how to
translate them into policies that promote safe male circumcision —
done by trained health workers with sterile equipment — while
teaching men that it won't make them invulnerable.
If male circumcision were widely
adopted, officials predicted that could help to avert tens of
thousands of HIV infections in coming years; Fauci cited one model
from South Africa that suggested possibly up to 2 million infections
could be averted over a decade.
"This is tremendous news, and it
could help millions of men while in turn reducing the risk faced by
millions of women," said Paul Zeitz of the Global AIDS Alliance.
Why would male circumcision play a
role? Cells in the foreskin of the penis are particularly
susceptible to the HIV virus, Fauci explained. Also, the foreskin is
more fragile than the tougher skin surrounding it, providing a
surface that the virus could penetrate more easily.
Researchers enrolled 2,784
HIV-negative men in Kisumu, Kenya, and 4,996 HIV-negative men in
Rakai, Uganda, into the studies. Some were circumcised; others were
just monitored.
Over two years, 22 of the
circumcised Kenyans became infected with HIV compared with 47
uncircumcised men, a 53 percent reduction. In Uganda, 22 circumcised
men became infected vs. 43 of the uncircumcised, a 48 percent
reduction.
The researchers are offering all of
the studies' uncircumcised men the chance to undergo the procedure,
and 80 percent of the uncircumcised Ugandans already have agreed,
said lead researcher Ronald Gray of Johns Hopkins University.
Side effects were rare, including
some mostly mild infections that were easily treated. The rate of
side effects was comparable to those seen in circumcised U.S.
infants, said Robert Bailey of the University of Illinois at
Chicago, who led the Kenyan trial. -- The
Associated Press
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