The Potential Impact of Male Circumcision on HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 11 July 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Medicine
- Vol. 3 (7) , e262
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030262
Abstract
A randomized controlled trial (RCT) has shown that male circumcision (MC) reduces sexual transmission of HIV from women to men by 60% (32%−76%; 95% CI) offering an intervention of proven efficacy for reducing the sexual spread of HIV. We explore the implications of this finding for the promotion of MC as a public health intervention to control HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. Using dynamical simulation models we consider the impact of MC on the relative prevalence of HIV in men and women and in circumcised and uncircumcised men. Using country level data on HIV prevalence and MC, we estimate the impact of increasing MC coverage on HIV incidence, HIV prevalence, and HIV-related deaths over the next ten, twenty, and thirty years in sub-Saharan Africa. Assuming that full coverage of MC is achieved over the next ten years, we consider three scenarios in which the reduction in transmission is given by the best estimate and the upper and lower 95% confidence limits of the reduction in transmission observed in the RCT. MC could avert 2.0 (1.1−3.8) million new HIV infections and 0.3 (0.1−0.5) million deaths over the next ten years in sub-Saharan Africa. In the ten years after that, it could avert a further 3.7 (1.9−7.5) million new HIV infections and 2.7 (1.5−5.3) million deaths, with about one quarter of all the incident cases prevented and the deaths averted occurring in South Africa. We show that a) MC will increase the proportion of infected people who are women from about 52% to 58%; b) where there is homogenous mixing but not all men are circumcised, the prevalence of infection in circumcised men is likely to be about 80% of that in uncircumcised men; c) MC is equivalent to an intervention, such as a vaccine or increased condom use, that reduces transmission in both directions by 37%. This analysis is based on the result of just one RCT, but if the results of that trial are confirmed we suggest that MC could substantially reduce the burden of HIV in Africa, especially in southern Africa where the prevalence of MC is low and the prevalence of HIV is high. While the protective benefit to HIV-negative men will be immediate, the full impact of MC on HIV-related illness and death will only be apparent in ten to twenty years.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Randomized, Controlled Intervention Trial of Male Circumcision for Reduction of HIV Infection Risk: The ANRS 1265 TrialPLoS Medicine, 2005
- HIV and male circumcision?a systematic review with assessment of the quality of studiesThe Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2005
- Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to ImpactPLoS Medicine, 2005
- The UNAIDS Estimation and Projection Package: a software package to estimate and project national HIV epidemicsSexually Transmitted Infections, 2004
- Antiretroviral Drugs for Tuberculosis Control in the Era of HIV/AIDSScience, 2003
- The epidemiology of human immunodeficiency virus in South AfricaPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2001
- The Efficiency of Male-to Female and Female-to-Male Sexual Transmission of the Human Immunodeficiency VirusEpidemiology, 1994
- HIV-1 and HIV-2 infections in men attending sexually transmitted disease clinics in Abidjan, Cote dʼlvoireAIDS, 1992
- Comparison of female to male and male to female transmission of HIV in 563 stable couples. European Study Group on Heterosexual Transmission of HIV.BMJ, 1992
- The relationship between male circumcision and HIV infection in African populationsAIDS, 1989