People gather next to a sign reading "AIDS 2014" in Melbourne on July
18, 2014. Researchers say a campaign promoting male circumcision to
prevent Aids infection also indirectly benefits women by reducing their
risk of contracting the HIV virus. PHOTO | AFP
MELBOURNE
A
campaign to promote male circumcision to prevent Aids infection also
indirectly benefits women by reducing their risk of contracting the HIV
virus, according to a study presented at the world Aids forum Friday.
In
a South African community where large numbers of men had been
circumcised, women who only had sex with circumcised partners had a 15
per cent lower risk of being infected by HIV compared with women who
also had uncircumcised partners, it found.
"The risk
reduction is small, but it is a start," said investigator Kevin Jean of
France's National Agency for AIDS Research (ANRS).
The study was presented on the final day of the 20th International Aids conference in Melbourne.
The
World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends voluntary circumcision as an
option for men in 14 sub-Saharan countries struggling with high rates
of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
REDUCED HIV RISK
The
guidelines, which have triggered a multimillion-dollar programme, are
founded on evidence from three trials carried out in South Africa, Kenya
and Uganda.
These concluded that circumcision resulted in a reduced HIV risk — for men — of between 50 and 60 per cent.
What has been fiercely debated, though, is the impact of male circumcision on women.
Key questions included whether, if large numbers of men were circumcised, the infection risk for women would fall too.
Another
issue raised was that circumcised men might think wrongly that they
were fully shielded from HIV and ignore advice to wear a condom — thus increasing the risk for women.
Looking
at these questions, the new study enrolled 2,452 women aged between 15
and 29 who lived in Orange Farm in South Africa, where the first of the
landmark trials was carried out in 2002.
PREVALENCE OF CIRCUMCISION
The
women's blood was tested in 2007, 2010 and 2012, and they were also
asked questions about their sexual behaviour, as was a representative
sample of local men.
During this time, the prevalence of circumcision among men in the community rose from 12 per cent to 53 per cent.
More
than 30 per cent of women reported having sexual relations only with
circumcised men: 17.8 per cent became infected during the study period.
But among women who had sex with uncircumcised men, the prevalence of HIV was almost twice as high, at 30.4 per cent.
In an interview with AFP, Jean said women who had only circumcised partners were relatively a small group.
Statistically speaking, they were less likely to have multiple sex partners, a well-known boost of infection risk.
INDIRECT BENEFITS
This explained in part why the risk reduction — 15 per cent, averaged out over the whole period — seems relatively small, Jean said.
Further
work will show whether this protection improves over time as more men
in the community become circumcised and uninfected younger men have the
operation, he said.
There was also good news from the
questions on sex behaviour: men were unlikely to engage in unprotected
intercourse after being circumcised, he said.
"What we
are seeing is an indirect effect," he said. "Circumcision reduces HIV
among men, and if fewer men are infected, they are less likely to infect
women."
TARGET NUMBERS MISSED
He stressed, though: "The message still has to be made that they use condoms."
An
earlier presentation at the Melbourne conference found that offering
men compensation in the form of food vouchers worth around $9 or $15
(6.5 euros or 11 euros) was a useful incentive for circumcision.
Most countries in the voluntary circumcision campaign remain far short of reaching their target numbers.
Investigators
have found that many men are deterred by the loss of wages from time
off work to have the operation, and the cost of travelling to and from
the clinic to have it carried out.
The protective
effect from circumcision appears to lie in the removal of cells in the
foreskin that are especially vulnerable to penetration by HIV.
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