Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?

Three trials have demonstrated the prophylactic effect of male circumcision (MC) for HIV acquisition among heterosexuals, and MC interventions are underway throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Similar efforts for men who have sex with men (MSM) are stymied by the potential for circumcised MSM to acquire H...

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Main Authors: Steven M Goodreau, Nicole B Carnegie, Eric Vittinghoff, Javier R Lama, Jonathan D Fuchs, Jorge Sanchez, Susan P Buchbinder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4116164?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8af8f99a148e4a2a96d1d6099fadab382020-11-25T02:15:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0197e10296010.1371/journal.pone.0102960Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?Steven M GoodreauNicole B CarnegieEric VittinghoffJavier R LamaJonathan D FuchsJorge SanchezSusan P BuchbinderThree trials have demonstrated the prophylactic effect of male circumcision (MC) for HIV acquisition among heterosexuals, and MC interventions are underway throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Similar efforts for men who have sex with men (MSM) are stymied by the potential for circumcised MSM to acquire HIV easily through receptive sex and transmit easily through insertive sex. Existing work suggests that MC for MSM should reach its maximum potential in settings where sexual role segregation is historically high and relatively stable across the lifecourse; HIV incidence among MSM is high; reported willingness for prophylactic circumcision is high; and pre-existing circumcision rates are low. We aim to identify the likely public health impact that MC interventions among MSM would have in one setting that fulfills these conditions-Peru-as a theoretical upper bound for their effectiveness among MSM generally.We use a dynamic, stochastic sexual network model based in exponential-family random graph modeling and parameterized from multiple behavioral surveys of Peruvian MSM. We consider three enrollment criteria (insertive during 100%, >80% or >60% of UAI) and two levels of uptake (25% and 50% of eligible men); we explore sexual role proportions from two studies and different frequencies of switching among role categories. Each scenario is simulated 10 times. We estimate that efficiency could reach one case averted per 6 circumcisions. However, the population-level impact of an optimistic MSM-MC intervention in this setting would likely be at most ∼5-10% incidence and prevalence reductions over 25 years.Roll-out of MC for MSM in Peru would not result in a substantial reduction in new HIV infections, despite characteristics in this population that could maximize such effects. Additional studies are needed to confirm these results for other MSM populations, and providers may consider the individual health benefits of offering MC to their MSM patients.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4116164?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steven M Goodreau
Nicole B Carnegie
Eric Vittinghoff
Javier R Lama
Jonathan D Fuchs
Jorge Sanchez
Susan P Buchbinder
spellingShingle Steven M Goodreau
Nicole B Carnegie
Eric Vittinghoff
Javier R Lama
Jonathan D Fuchs
Jorge Sanchez
Susan P Buchbinder
Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Steven M Goodreau
Nicole B Carnegie
Eric Vittinghoff
Javier R Lama
Jonathan D Fuchs
Jorge Sanchez
Susan P Buchbinder
author_sort Steven M Goodreau
title Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
title_short Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
title_full Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
title_fullStr Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
title_full_unstemmed Can male circumcision have an impact on the HIV epidemic in men who have sex with men?
title_sort can male circumcision have an impact on the hiv epidemic in men who have sex with men?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Three trials have demonstrated the prophylactic effect of male circumcision (MC) for HIV acquisition among heterosexuals, and MC interventions are underway throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Similar efforts for men who have sex with men (MSM) are stymied by the potential for circumcised MSM to acquire HIV easily through receptive sex and transmit easily through insertive sex. Existing work suggests that MC for MSM should reach its maximum potential in settings where sexual role segregation is historically high and relatively stable across the lifecourse; HIV incidence among MSM is high; reported willingness for prophylactic circumcision is high; and pre-existing circumcision rates are low. We aim to identify the likely public health impact that MC interventions among MSM would have in one setting that fulfills these conditions-Peru-as a theoretical upper bound for their effectiveness among MSM generally.We use a dynamic, stochastic sexual network model based in exponential-family random graph modeling and parameterized from multiple behavioral surveys of Peruvian MSM. We consider three enrollment criteria (insertive during 100%, >80% or >60% of UAI) and two levels of uptake (25% and 50% of eligible men); we explore sexual role proportions from two studies and different frequencies of switching among role categories. Each scenario is simulated 10 times. We estimate that efficiency could reach one case averted per 6 circumcisions. However, the population-level impact of an optimistic MSM-MC intervention in this setting would likely be at most ∼5-10% incidence and prevalence reductions over 25 years.Roll-out of MC for MSM in Peru would not result in a substantial reduction in new HIV infections, despite characteristics in this population that could maximize such effects. Additional studies are needed to confirm these results for other MSM populations, and providers may consider the individual health benefits of offering MC to their MSM patients.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4116164?pdf=render
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