| Patrick S. Sullivan*, Peter H. Kilmarx,
Thomas A. Peterman, Allan W. Taylor, Allyn K. Nakashima, Mary L. Kamb, Lee
Warner, Timothy D. Mastro
Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this article.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing
interests exist.
Patrick S. Sullivan, Peter H. Kilmarx, Allan W. Taylor, Allyn K.
Nakashima, and Timothy D. Mastro are with the Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia,
United States of America. Thomas A. Peterman and Mary L. Kamb are with the
Division of Sexually Transmitted Disease Prevention, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America. Lee
Warner is with the Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America. The
findings and conclusions in this commentary are those of the authors, and do
not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
pss0@cdc.gov
Three randomized, controlled clinical trials in South
Africa, Kenya, and Uganda were recently unblinded early because interim
analyses concluded that circumcision of HIV-negative adult males reduced
their risk for acquiring HIV infection through penile-vaginal sex [1-3]. In
each trial, men who had been randomly assigned to an intervention group
receiving circumcision had a lower incidence of HIV infection in up to two
years of follow up, compared to men who were assigned to a control group not
receiving circumcision. The estimated reduction in the risk of HIV infection
ranged from 51% to 60%; per-protocol estimates of risk reduction ranged from
55% to 76%.
It is now clear that male circumcision can be efficacious
for men in reducing their risk of HIV acquisition through sex with women
[4]. Some experts predict that the impact of male circumcision as a
biomedical intervention for HIV prevention in Africa could be large [5,6],
and preparatory work has been done to establish male circumcision programs
in Africa. The implications of African trials on circumcision for HIV
prevention programs in the United States are less clear-despite the interest
of the popular press in the idea [7]. Here, we consider the differences
between the HIV epidemics in Africa and the US, the current status of male
circumcision in the US, and the knowledge gaps that will need to be
addressed as we consider whether male circumcision should be evaluated or
implemented as a biomedical intervention to reduce sexually acquired HIV
infections domestically.
Epidemiological Differences
The results of any trial must be interpreted with the
caution that inference not be extended to populations differing from the
study participants in important ways. The HIV epidemics in Africa are
substantially different from the US epidemic. Generalized HIV epidemics
exist in many areas of Africa, and the population prevalence of HIV among
adult Kenyans, Ugandans, and South Africans ranges from 6%-19% [8]. The
predominant mode of HIV transmission in Africa is male-female sex. In
contrast, the US has a concentrated epidemic, with most sexual transmission
occurring among men who have sex with men (MSM). The general population
prevalence of HIV is about 0.4% in the US [9], and only 15% of men diagnosed
with HIV infection during 2005 were reported to have acquired HIV through
male-female sex [10].
Biological Plausibility of Circumcision to Prevent HIV
Acquisition
The association between circumcision and reduced risk for
HIV acquisition is biologically plausible: the foreskin contains high
concentrations of superficial Langerhans cells, CD4+ T cells, and
macrophages [11]-all target cells for HIV infection, some of which may also
be close to the skin surface [12,13]. In addition, the preputial sac may
serve as a reservoir for HIV-containing secretions, resulting in prolonged
contact time after exposure to secretions, and the foreskin may present less
of a physical barrier to HIV entry than the more heavily keratinized skin of
the shaft of the penis [12], and may have more frequent epithelial
disruption. There are also potential indirect mechanisms of association
between lack of circumcision and HIV risk; for example, lack of circumcision
is associated with increased risk of genital ulcer diseases, which in turn
are associated with increased risk of HIV transmission and acquisition [14].
Considerations for Prevention of HIV Transmission by
Penile-Vaginal Sex in the US
Epidemic differences are important because, on a
population basis, the impact of circumcision as an intervention to prevent
HIV infection among men who have sex with women will depend on the
likelihood of HIV exposure among such men in the US-and, therefore, on the
prevalence of HIV among their female sex partners. A recent analysis of data
from sexually transmitted disease clinics in Baltimore evaluated the
association of male circumcision and risk of prevalent HIV infection in two
ways-first, evaluating all male attendees at the clinics, and second,
restricting the analysis to males who were known to have been exposed to HIV
heterosexually (e.g., sexual contacts of partners known to be infected with
HIV) [15]. The results indicated that, while circumcision was not associated
with lower HIV infection in the entire population of male STD clinic
attendees, where HIV prevalence was 3%, circumcision was associated with
significantly lower HIV prevalence in the subset of men with a known
infected female sex partner, where the group's prevalence of infection was
markedly higher at 12% (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.46; 95% confidence
interval [CI] 0.22-0.97). In effect, this analysis illustrated the impact of
partner prevalence of HIV on the association of circumcision and HIV
infection status, and concluded that it was difficult to detect a protective
effect from circumcision on HIV infection in the setting of a partner pool
with lower HIV prevalence.
Considerations for Prevention of HIV Transmission by
Male-Male Sex
Most sexual transmission of HIV in the US occurs through
male-male sex [10], most often infecting the receptive partner in
penile-anal intercourse [16]. The results from the African trials
demonstrated that circumcision was protective for men who were the insertive
partner in vaginal intercourse, suggesting that the utility of male
circumcision in preventing HIV transmission among MSM may be limited.
Because reducing the concentration of target cells for HIV infection on the
penis is a proposed protective mechanism, understanding the relative viral
challenge presented by vaginal versus anal-rectal secretions is relevant to
evaluating the plausibility of a protective effect of circumcision for the
insertive male partner during anal intercourse. The concentration of HIV RNA
in rectal secretions may be higher than in blood or semen, regardless of use
of antiretroviral therapy [17], and may be orders of magnitude higher than
the concentrations in vaginal or cervical secretions [17,18]. Circumcision
may change the balance of virus and target cells, but if rectal mucosal
secretions contain a higher concentration of infectious virus than vaginal
secretions, any potential protective effect of circumcision for the
insertive partner may be overwhelmed by excess virus. Also, new data suggest
that, for limited periods of time before wound healing is complete, female
sex partners of newly circumcised HIV-infected men may be at increased risk
of acquiring HIV [4]. Possible transient increased risk of transmission
(before complete wound healing) from recently circumcised HIV-infected MSM
to their receptive anal intercourse partners would also be of concern.
Few studies provide evidence as to whether circumcision
may protect against HIV infection among MSM. In a vaccine preparedness
cohort of MSM followed from 1995 to 1997, circumcision was significantly
associated with a decreased risk for HIV seroconversion (aOR = 0.5; 95% CI
0.3-0.9), controlling for number of male sex partners and unprotected sex
with an HIV-positive partner [19]. In a cross-sectional survey of gay men in
Seattle in the early 1990s, circumcision was associated with decreased odds
of prevalent HIV infection (aOR = 0.5; 95% CI 0.25-1.0) [20]. While falling
short of the quality of data from a randomized intervention trial, these
limited data suggest that circumcised MSM in the US may have decreased risk
of HIV infection. However, it is possible that the noted associations in
these two observational studies were related to uncontrolled bias. A small
cross-sectional study of Australian MSM found no association between
circumcision status and risk of HIV infection, when stratifying by insertive
and receptive roles [21].
WHO/UNAIDS Technical Consultation on Male Circumcision and
HIV Prevention: Research Implications for Policy and Programming
In March 2007, the World Health Organization and the Joint
United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS held a technical consultation on male
circumcision and issued a summary document providing conclusions and
recommendations relating to policy and programming on male circumcision and
HIV prevention [4]. The document hails the results of the three African
trials as “an important landmark in the history of HIV prevention” and
states that male circumcision should be recognized as an efficacious
intervention for the prevention of heterosexually acquired HIV infection in
men. It was noted that male circumcision does not provide complete
protection against HIV, and should always be considered as part of a
comprehensive HIV prevention package. The document also concluded that the
population level impact of male circumcision will be greatest in settings
where the prevalence of heterosexually transmitted HIV infection is high,
the levels of male circumcision are low, and populations at risk are large.
Further, the document provides guidance about communication strategies,
ethical and cultural issues, programmatic issues, financing issues, and
needs for supporting health care services in developing countries. The
document also explicitly states that, based on limited available data,
promoting circumcision for HIV-positive men is not recommended. The full
report of the technical consultation is available at:
http://www.who.int/entity/hiv/mediacentre/MCrecommendations_en.pdf [4].
Virological Issues
In the African countries where circumcision has been
demonstrated to be efficacious, the predominant HIV subtypes are A, C, and
D; it is likely that some recombinant strains were also represented in the
Kenya and Uganda trials. In the US, subtype B predominates. Despite the
theoretical possibility that subtype differences in either vaginal shedding
of HIV or affinity to HIV receptors (especially those natively expressed on
the foreskin) could modify the effectiveness of circumcision as an HIV
prevention intervention, the consistent findings of the African trials argue
that this is unlikely. For example, despite differences in vaginal shedding
between subtype C and subtypes A and D [18], the efficacy of circumcision in
trials where subtypes A, C, or D were prevalent was comparable. One
potentially relevant biological difference relates to binding avidity of HIV
subtypes for CCR5 receptors, which are important mechanisms for entry into
Langerhans cells, and are the predominant HIV-1 co-receptor in foreskin
immune cells [11]. Subtype C is reported to have lower binding avidity than
subtype B for CCR5 receptors [22]; it is unclear whether the greater binding
avidity of subtype B for CCR5 could represent an escape mechanism to
overcome the decreased availability of target cells that results from
circumcision.
Status of Circumcision in the US
Public health recommendations will likely have the largest
impact in populations where circumcision has been rare. Non-religious male
circumcision was introduced to the US in the late 1800s [23], and by the
1940s, an increasing proportion of male children in the US were born in
hospitals and were circumcised [24]. The proportion of newborns that were
circumcised annually reached 80% after World War II and peaked in the
mid-1960s. The proportion of male babies circumcised subsequently decreased.
According to the National Hospital Discharge Survey, which documents
circumcisions performed in hospitals but would not ascertain circumcisions
performed outside of the hospital for religious reasons, 65% of newborns
were circumcised in 1999. Although the overall proportion of newborns
circumcised has been stable from 1979 to 1999 [25], the proportion of black
newborns who were circumcised rose over this period to approximately 65%.
Significant discrepancies also exist by region. While the proportion of
newborns born in the Midwest who were circumcised increased over the 20-year
period to 81% in 1999, the proportion of infants born in the West who were
circumcised decreased over the same period, to 37% in 1999 [25].
Data from another hospital discharge survey, the National
Inpatient Sample, present a slightly different picture [26]. In that survey,
newborn circumcision rates increased from 48% in 1988-1991, to 61% in
1997-2000. Circumcision was more common among newborns born to families of
higher socioeconomic status, in the Northeast or Midwest, and among newborns
who were black [26].
Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination
Surveys from 1999 to 2004 indicated that the overall prevalence of
circumcision among adult males in the US was 79% and varied by
race/ethnicity (88% in non-Hispanic white men, 73% in non-Hispanic black
men, 42% in Mexican Americans, and 50% in others). The prevalence of
circumcision decreased among US-born men from the 1970s to the 1980s [27].
Although causality cannot be implied by these data and many other factors
are likely operative, the rates of HIV and AIDS among non-Hispanic black and
Hispanic men are considerably higher than in non-Hispanic white men in the
US [28].
Willingness of Adult Males to Be Circumcised
The ability of investigators to fully enroll three trials
of adult circumcision [1-3] in Africa speaks to the acceptability of
circumcision among adult males in South Africa, Kenya, and Uganda. A recent
systematic review of published literature suggests that adult male
circumcision may be acceptable as an HIV prevention intervention in many
countries in sub-Saharan Africa [29]. In the US, the overwhelming majority
of circumcisions are performed on newborns; adult circumcisions are commonly
only done for medical reasons, such as preputial cancer or phimosis. It is
not clear whether adult circumcision, were it to be recommended in the US,
would be acceptable as a prevention intervention. Preliminary evidence from
interviews with uncircumcised MSM surveyed at Gay Pride festivals in the US
suggests that the majority of MSM would consider circumcision as an adult,
if circumcision were shown to reduce risk of HIV infection by male-male sex
[30]-although respondents were not told in the survey that protection would
be partial or that condom use would still be recommended after circumcision.
Policy Issues Related to Circumcision of Newborn Boys
The American Academy of Pediatrics changed from a less
conclusive stance on circumcision in 1989 [31], which cited potential
medical benefits and advantages (primarily reduced occurrence of phimosis
and penile cancer) as well as disadvantages and risks, to their statement in
1999 that available data were not sufficient to recommend routine neonatal
circumcision [32]. The 1999 position was re-affirmed in 2005 by the Academy
after publication of the results of the South Africa trial [33]. In a 1995
US review, 61% of infant circumcisions were paid by private insurance, 36%
were paid for by Medicaid, and 3% were self-paid by the parents of the
infant [34]. Since 1999, 16 states have eliminated Medicaid payments for
circumcisions that were not deemed medically necessary [35].
Should Adult Male Circumcision Be Recommended for HIV
Prevention in the US?
Circumcision may have a role for the prevention of HIV
transmission in the US. However, because of the many differences between the
underlying HIV epidemics in Africa and the US, differences in the prevalence
of male circumcision in Africa and the US, and the considerable gaps in
knowledge that exist regarding the potential impact of circumcision on HIV
transmission by male-male sex, the extent of this role on a population basis
is unknown. Further, the already high prevalence of circumcision among US
men suggests some limitations in the potential impact of circumcision at a
population level.
Based on the data from the three African clinical trials,
it is likely that circumcision will decrease the probability of a man
acquiring HIV via penile-vaginal sex with an HIV-infected woman in the US.
Until public health recommendations are available for the US, some sexually
active men may consider circumcision as an additional HIV prevention
measure, but should do so only in consultation with their physician or
health care provider, and with a clear understanding of the costs and risks
of circumcision and the need to continue use of other, proven prevention
measures (e.g., reducing the numbers of sex partners and using condoms
consistently and correctly). Men who choose to be circumcised should also be
counseled about the importance of refraining from sexual intercourse
following circumcision, until wound healing is complete [4].
To consider the possible impact of public health
recommendations for male circumcision, we must also take into account HIV
incidence in high-risk groups, as well as adoption of other protective
behaviors, such as condom use. For example, HIV incidence among US MSM
recruited in community- and venue-based samples was, on average, about 1.9%
annually [36], and 36% of MSM in the US National HIV Behavioral Surveillance
System reported having unprotected anal sex with a casual partner in the
last 12 months before interview [37]. There are few data on HIV incidence
among high-risk heterosexuals in the US, but there are limited data on
condom use: in 2002, 16% of high-risk heterosexual men and 24% of high-risk
heterosexual women reported that they never used condoms during
penile-vaginal sex with a non-primary partner [38]. Currently available data
on disparities in rates of prevalent HIV infection and AIDS [28,39] and the
prevalence of circumcision among US men suggest that black and Hispanic men
may have particular opportunities for reduction of risk of HIV acquisition
through circumcision.
Future Research and Consultation
In order to understand the potential for male circumcision
as an HIV prevention approach in the US, we believe that there are important
questions that should be answered. These include questions that can be
answered by basic science, by modeling, by surveys of acceptability, by
considering ethical issues, and, perhaps, by clinical trials in the US. For
example, it is important to understand more fully the differences in
shedding of HIV by rectal versus vaginal mucosa. Modeling may provide
important information on (1) the impact on the US epidemic from increasing
male circumcision rates, and (2) the cost-benefit ratio of circumcision
among newborns, or among adult men with high risk of exposure to HIV through
sex. Cost-benefit models may be limited by lack of definitive transmission
parameters in US populations and should therefore be conducted with
appropriate sensitivity analyses. Surveys may increase our understanding of
the acceptability of adult male circumcision among groups of uncircumcised
adult males in the US for whom circumcision might be recommended (e.g., men
who have unprotected vaginal or anal intercourse with HIV-infected partners,
or with multiple partners of unknown serostatus), and of barriers and
facilitators to acceptance of adult male circumcision, were it recommended
as an HIV prevention strategy. Given recent trial results and international
consensus that male circumcision is efficacious, it is important to consider
ethical questions about whether equipoise exists for a US MSM trial, and
about how to implement trials or programs of male circumcision in the
context of complex cultural and religious views about circumcision [27].
Evaluating data from basic science, modeling, and acceptability surveys and
addressing ethics questions will be important in deciding whether a clinical
trial to determine the efficacy of male circumcision among MSM may be
feasible and appropriate in the US.
Further, recommendations about circumcision in newborns or
high-risk adults for the prevention of HIV infection cannot be made without
a more comprehensive discussion of other, documented disease prevention
benefits and risks of circumcision. Benefits include reduction in
acquisition of sexually transmitted genital ulcer disease, infant urinary
tract infections, penile cancer, and cervical cancer in female sex partners
[14,40-43]. Although this is less clear, circumcision may also be associated
with reduced risk of herpes simplex virus 2 infection [14]. Risks include
postoperative infection, damage to the penis, excessive bleeding, problems
with postoperative appearance of the penis, and anesthesia-related problems
[1-3,40]. If it is determined that circumcision can play a role in
preventing HIV transmission and other adverse health outcomes in the US, it
will be important to consider the extent to which circumcision is included
in public and private medical insurance benefits. The cost, medical risks,
and potential benefits of circumcision for HIV prevention will need to be
considered separately for infants, high-risk heterosexuals, and high-risk
MSM. Relatively high rates of circumcision have prevailed in the US, where
rates of HIV infection are currently relatively low. To the extent that a
high prevalence of circumcision may have hypothetically led to lower HIV
rates in the US, reducing reimbursement and declining rates of the procedure
could reverse this beneficial effect.
To address these scientific and policy questions with a
broad group of stakeholders, the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention convened a consultation in April 2007 to gain diverse input about
the public health research agenda and to develop public health
recommendations about the role of male circumcision for prevention of HIV in
the US. The summary of the outcomes of the consultation will be made
available later in 2007, via the Centers' Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention
Web site ( http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/). |