THE NEW YORK TIMES
   
  Circumcision Halves H.I.V. Risk, U.S. Agency Finds 
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Published: December 14, 2006

   
  Circumcision appears to reduce a man’s risk of contracting AIDS from 
heterosexual sex by half, United States government health officials said 
yesterday, and the directors of the two largest funds for fighting the disease 
said they would consider paying for circumcisions in high-risk countries. 
   
  The announcement was made by officials of the National Institutes of Health 
as they halted two clinical trials, in Kenya and Uganda, on the ground that not 
offering circumcision to all the men taking part would be unethical. The 
success of the trials confirmed a study done last year in South Africa. 
   
  AIDS experts immediately hailed the finding. “This is very exciting news,” 
said Daniel Halperin, an H.I.V. specialist at the Harvard Center for Population 
and Development, who has argued that circumcision slows the spread of AIDS in 
the parts of Africa where it is common. 
   
  In an interview from Zimbabwe, he added, “I have no doubt that as word of 
this gets around, millions of African men will want to get circumcised, and 
that will save many lives.”
   
  Uncircumcised men are thought to be more susceptible because the underside of 
the foreskin is rich in Langerhans cells, sentinel cells of the immune system, 
which attach easily to the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS. The 
foreskin also often suffers small tears during intercourse. 
   
  But experts also cautioned that circumcision is no cure-all. It only lessens 
the chances that a man will catch the virus; it is expensive compared to 
condoms, abstinence or other methods; and the surgery has serious risks if 
performed by folk healers using dirty blades, as often happens in rural Africa. 
   
  Circumcision is “not a magic bullet, but a potentially important 
intervention,” said Dr. Kevin M. De Cock, director of H.I.V./AIDS for the World 
Health Organization. 
   
  Sex education messages for young men need to make it clear that “this does 
not mean that you have an absolute protection,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, an 
AIDS researcher and director of the National Institute of Allergy and 
Infectious Diseases. 
   
  Circumcision should be used with other prevention methods, he said, and it 
does nothing to prevent spread by anal sex or drug injection, ways in which the 
virus commonly spreads in the United States. 
   
  The two trials, conducted by researchers from universities in Illinois, 
Maryland, Canada, Uganda and Kenya, involved nearly 3,000 heterosexual men in 
Kisumu, Kenya, and nearly 5,000 in Rakai, Uganda. None were infected with 
H.I.V. They were divided into circumcised and uncircumcised groups, given safe 
sex advice (although many presumably did not take it), and retested regularly. 
   
  The trials were stopped this week by the N.I.H. Data Safety and Monitoring 
Board after data showed that the Kenyan men had a 53 percent reduction in new 
H.I.V. infection. Twenty-two of the 1,393 circumcised men in that study caught 
the disease, compared with 47 of the 1,391 uncircumcised men. 
   
  In Uganda, the reduction was 48 percent. 
   
  Those results echo the finding of a trial completed last year in Orange Farm, 
a township in South Africa, financed by the French government, which 
demonstrated a reduction of 60 percent among circumcised men.
   
  The two largest agencies dedicated to fighting AIDS said they would now be 
willing to pay for circumcisions, which they have not before because there was 
too little evidence that it worked. 
   
  Dr. Richard G. A. Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight 
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, which has almost $5 billion in pledges, said in 
a television interview that if a country submitted plans to conduct sterile 
circumcisions, “I think it’s very likely that our technical panel would approve 
it.”
   
  Dr. Mark Dybul, executive director of President Bush’s $15 billion Emergency 
Plan for AIDS Relief, said in a statement that his agency “will support 
implementation of safe medical male circumcision for H.I.V./AIDS prevention” if 
world health agencies recommend it.
   
  He also warned that it was only one new weapon in the fight, adding, 
“Prevention efforts must reinforce the A.B.C. approach — abstain, be faithful, 
and correct and consistent use of condoms.” 
   
  Researchers have long noted that parts of Africa where circumcision is common 
— particularly the Muslim countries of West Africa — have much lower AIDS 
rates, while those in southern Africa, where circumcision is rare, have the 
highest. 
   
  But drawing conclusions was always confounded by other regional factors, like 
strict Shariah law in some Muslim areas, rape and genocide in East Africa, 
polygamy, rites that require widows to have sex with a relative, patronage of 
prostitutes by miners, and men’s insistence on dangerous “dry sex” — with the 
woman’s vaginal walls robbed of secretions with desiccating herbs. 
   
  Outside Muslim regions, circumcision is spotty. In South Africa, for example, 
the Xhosa people circumcise teenage boys, while Zulus do not. AIDS is common in 
both tribes.
   
  Nelson Mandela’s autobiography, “Long Walk to Freedom,” contains an unnerving 
but hilarious account of his own Xhosa circumcision, by spear blade, as a 
teenager. Although he was supposed to shout, “I am a man!” he grimaced in pain, 
he wrote.
   
  But not all initiation ceremonies are laughing matters. Every year, some 
South African teenagers die from infections, and the use of one blade on many 
young men may help spread AIDS. 
   
  In recent years, as word has spread that circumcision might be protective, 
many southern African men have sought it out. A Zambian hospital offered $3 
circumcisions last year, and Swaziland trained 60 doctors to do them for $40 
after waiting lists at its national hospital grew.
   
  “Private practitioners also do it,” Dr. Halperin said. “In some places, it’s 
$20; in others, much more. Lots of the wealthy elite have already done it. It 
prevents S.T.D.’s, it’s seen as cleaner, sex is better, women like it. I 
predict that a lot of men who can’t afford private clinics will start clamoring 
for it.” (S.T.D.’s are sexually transmitted diseases.) 
   
  Male circumcision also benefits women. For example, a study of the medical 
records of 300 Ugandan couples last year estimated that circumcised men 
infected with H.I.V. were about 30 percent less likely to transmit it to their 
female partners. 
   
  Earlier studies on Western men have shown that circumcision significantly 
reduces the rate at which men infect women with the virus that causes cervical 
cancer. A study published in 2002 in The New England Journal of Medicine found 
that uncircumcised men were about three times as likely as circumcised ones 
with a similar number of sexual partners to carry the human papillomavirus.
   
  The suspected mechanism was the same — cells on the inside of the foreskin 
were also more susceptible to that virus, which is not closely related to H.I.V.

 
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