All this really seems to mean is that the rising trend of circumcising men in order to protect them is probably a bit dumb, and that having sex when you're HIV+ and your knob is bleeding is probably even dumber.New Scientist wrote:Policy-makers must exercise caution when including male circumcision among their tactics for fighting AIDS, researchers said on Tuesday. Early data from a trial in Uganda suggests the practice could increase infections in women.
In 2006, three groundbreaking studies conducted in Africa found that male circumcision halved a man's risk of being infected with HIV (see Male circumcision: a contentious cut). That discovery raised hope that the war against AIDS could be transformed by a simple, low-cost operation.
The new trial, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, explores a different angle – to see if circumcised men who are infected with HIV are any less likely to infect their female partner. US and Ugandan researchers are following almost 2000 HIV-infected men in Rakai, Uganda. Some of them have been circumcised, while the others have remained uncircumcised to act as a comparison.
A proportion of volunteers in both groups had uninfected long-term female partners at the start of the study. These women were also enrolled and monitored. A review at the study's six-month mark looked at 70 couples in the circumcised group and found that 11 of the women had become infected (16%). Among 54 couples in the "uncircumcised" group, four women had become infected (7%).
Time to heal
The study is ongoing and the data is not considered conclusive but the researchers say they are concerned. They believe several of the infections had been transmitted by men who had had sex before their wounds had fully healed from the circumcision surgery. HIV can be carried in both blood and semen.
If the increase in partner infection after circumcision is confirmed, it would mean it could not be endorsed as a prevention strategy without ensuring men and women are fully aware of the need to refrain from intercourse for a month or so until the penile wound has healed, the researchers said.
Volunteers in the Rakai study were repeatedly given safe-sex counselling and provided with free condoms. Women who become infected have been promised access to free HIV care and antiretroviral drugs.
Weighing the data
"We need to err on the side of caution to protect women in the context of any future male circumcision programme," said the study's lead scientist, Maria Wawer, at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, Maryland, US.
The data was released on Tuesday as a contribution to a meeting of the World Health Organization and UNAIDS in Montreux, Switzerland. The two agencies are mulling the outcome of the three big trials to weigh how far, and how fast, they should endorse circumcision as a prevention policy.
The WHO's Kevin De Cock stressed the need for caution and good preparations: "While male circumcision has extraordinary potential to prevent HIV infection, these new findings remind us that we must proceed with thought and care in developing male circumcision in Africa."
There are a number of parts I'm interested in - what's the point in circumcising for protection if he's already infected? I couldn't read the previous linked article to see whether circumcision was meant to prevent infection or spreading previously existing infection.
And then, the ethics of the study makes me twitch a little, even though the data is probably good. Does anyone else get that reaction?
Also: de Cock is a fantastic name.