Circumcision Not Effective In Preventing HIV Among
MSM, Study Finds
Despite research showing circumcision can reduce a
man's risk of HIV during heterosexual intercourse, a
study published Wednesday in the Journal of the
American Medical Association found that the
procedure offers little protection against the virus
for men who have sex with men, AFP/Yahoo! News reports.
According to the study, there was minimal difference in
HIV infections between those MSM who were circumcised
and those who were not (AFP/Yahoo! News, 10/7).
For the study, researchers at CDC, led by Gregorio
Millett, reviewed 15 previous studies on circumcision
that included 53,567 MSM from Australia, Great Britain,
Canada, India, the Netherlands, Peru, Taiwan and the
U.S. Circumcised MSM were 14% less likely to be
HIV-positive than those who were not, a rate that was
not statistically significant, according to the
researchers. Millett said, "You can't necessarily say
with confidence that we're seeing a true effect there,"
adding, "Overall, we're not finding a protective effect
associated with circumcision" for MSM (Dunham, Reuters,
10/7).
However, when examining studies carried out before the
introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy in
1996, the researchers found evidence that circumcision
in the past had a protective effect for MSM, BBC News
reports. The researchers said one explanation for the
reduced effectiveness of circumcision among MSM
following the introduction of HAART is that the
efficacy of drugs diminished the perceived need to
practice safer sex to avoid contracting HIV. In
addition, the study noted that HAART might help reduce
the risk of HIV transmission to a level that
circumcision does not provide further benefits. The
researchers also said that there may have been a
smaller proportion of men in the pre-HAART trials who
engaged primarily in receptive anal sex, which carries
the greatest risk of HIV among MSM (BBC News,
10/7).
CDC's Peter Kilmarx, who was not involved in the
study, said the agency is set to release a draft of
formal recommendations on circumcision early next year.
Although Millett said circumcision cannot be
recommended as a strategy for HIV prevention among MSM
in the U.S., he added that there are signs the
procedure could protect certain MSM depending on sexual
practices. For example, Millett said that studies in
Australia and Peru have shown that men who engaged only
in insertive anal sex and were not being penetrated by
male sex partners experienced a greater level of
protection from circumcision (Reuters, 10/7). However,
Millett said, "Even if we find that insertive men are
protected, that might be such a small proportion that
we wouldn't get the effect on the overall population
that we'd like. As it stands now, circumcision is
unlikely to have the same kind of benefit [in the U.S.]
that it's projected to have in Africa" (Lauerman,
Bloomberg, 10/7).
According to the authors, more research might be
needed to determine the amount of protection provided
by circumcision for insertive MSM (AFP/Yahoo! News,
10/7). "These studies weren't designed to answer this
question in the first place, and it's possible that
they're too varied to show an effect," Millet said,
adding, "The idea makes sense, but there just aren't
enough data out there right now to show whether there's
a benefit" (Bloomberg, 10/7). In a related editorial
also published in JAMA, a team of peer reviewers from
Vanderbilt University wrote that "circumcision would
likely be insufficiently efficient to be universally
effective in reducing HIV and will have to be combined
with other prevention modalities to have a substantial
and sustained prevention effect" (AFP/Yahoo! News,
10/7).
The study is available online. The related editorial also
is available online.
|