Male circumcision

Hallett TB, Singh K, Smith JA, White RG, Abu-Raddad LJ, Garnett GP. Understanding the impact of male circumcision interventions on the spread of HIV in Southern Africa. PLoS ONE. 2008; 3(5):e2212. Three randomised controlled trials have clearly shown that circumcision of adult men reduces the chance that they acquire HIV infection. However, the potential impact of circumcision programmes--either alone or in combination with other established approaches--is not known and no further field trials are planned. Hallett and colleagues have used a mathematical model, parameterised using existing trial findings, to understand and predict the impact of circumcision programmes at the population level. The results indicate that circumcision will lead to reductions in incidence for women and uncircumcised men, as well as those circumcised, but that even the most effective intervention is unlikely to completely stem the spread of the virus. Without additional interventions, HIV incidence could eventually be reduced by 25-35%, depending on the level of coverage achieved and whether onward transmission from circumcised men is also reduced. However, circumcision interventions can act synergistically with other types of prevention programmes, and if efforts to change behaviour are increased in parallel with the scale-up of circumcision services, then dramatic reductions in HIV incidence could be achieved. In the long-term, this could lead to reduced AIDS deaths and less need for anti-retroviral therapy. Any increases in risk behaviours following circumcision, i.e. 'risk compensation', could offset some of the potential benefit of the intervention, especially for women, but only very large increases would lead to more infections overall. Circumcision will not be the silver bullet to prevent HIV transmission, but interventions could help to substantially protect men and women from infection, especially in combination with other approaches.

Editors’ note: As this modelling study confirms, male circumcision can not and should not be a standalone HIV prevention strategy but rather part of a combination prevention strategy that increases choices for people. Since all methods, other than sexual abstinence, are partially protective, people should aim to combine methods for increased protection. This modelling study also estimates the potential impact for women, the subject of an important consultation being convened by WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF, and UNFPA in Mombasa, Kenya, June 24-25 2008.

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