Male circumcision and HIV heterosexual transmission

Authors

  • Walter A Eyer-Silva Universidade do Rio de Janeiro; Hospital Universitário Gaffrée e Guinle

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89102003000500022

Keywords:

Circumcision, HIV infections^i2^stransmiss, HIV infections^i2^sprevention and cont, Africa, Heterosexual transmission

Abstract

Since the early years of the AIDS epidemic significant geographic differences in HIV prevalence were reported within neighboring countries and neighboring regions within the same country in sub-Saharan Africa. These differences could not be fully explained by factors such as sexual behavior and condom use. Mounting epidemiological data have demonstrated that male circumcision is a major protective factor against male heterosexual HIV infection in sub-Saharan Africa and probably contributes to these significant differences in HIV prevalence. This is a review of African studies on the association between male circumcision and HIV infection, the origin of circumcision practices in human societies, potential prepuce mechanisms for increasing male vulnerability to heterosexual HIV infection, its association with other infectious and neoplastic diseases, controversies on the convenience of male circumcision as an HIV control strategy in Africa, the scarce Brazilian literature on male circumcision and perspectives of future research.

Published

2003-10-01

Issue

Section

Current Comments

How to Cite

Eyer-Silva, W. A. (2003). Male circumcision and HIV heterosexual transmission . Revista De Saúde Pública, 37(5), 678-686. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89102003000500022