| Literature DB >> 20966458 |
Timothy B Hallett1, Ramzi A Alsallaq, Jared M Baeten, Helen Weiss, Connie Celum, Ron Gray, Laith Abu-Raddad.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mathematical modelling has indicated that expansion of male circumcision services in high HIV prevalence settings can substantially reduce population-level HIV transmission. However, these projections need revision to incorporate new data on the effect of male circumcision on the risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20966458 PMCID: PMC3272710 DOI: 10.1136/sti.2010.043372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Transm Infect ISSN: 1368-4973 Impact factor: 3.519
Parameters specifying the effect of male circumcision on the rate of HIV transmission (ranges used in the uncertainty analysis are presented in table S1 in the online technical appendix)
| Parameter description | Value | Source |
| Mean duration of wound healing period | 14 days (95% healed within 6 weeks). | |
| Change in the rate of female-to-male HIV transmission before wound is healed versus before circumcision | Increases 3-fold | |
| Change in rate of HIV male-to-female HIV transmission before wound is healed versus before circumcision | Increases 3.5-fold | |
| Proportion of men who remain sexually active during the wound healing period | 13% | |
| Change in rate of female-to-male HIV transmission after the wound has healed versus before circumcision | Decreases by 65% | |
| Change in rate of male-to-female HIV transmission before 2 years after the operation versus before circumcision | No effect | |
| Change in rate of male-to-female HIV transmission from 2 years after the operation versus before circumcision | We estimated this after performing a meta-analysis of data from the two studies among HIV sero-discordant couples that measured this effect |
Figure 1Estimated reduction in incidence following circumcision interventions among the whole adult population (A,B) and women (C,D), in Zimbabwe (model 1) and Kisumu, Kenya (model 2), respectively. It is assumed that circumcision reduces the chance of male-to-female transmission by 0% (solid line) and 46% (dashed lines). For the other assumptions, see the text.
Figure 2Multivariate uncertainty analysis of the reduction in HIV incidence 20 years after a circumcision intervention starts, among the whole adult population (A) and women (B). The solid line shows the estimate making the original assumptions (ie, only the effect of circumcision on the chance of acquisition after the wound heals); the dashed line shows the updated estimates using the new information (ie, includes effect of circumcision on acquisition/transmission during wound healing and effect on male-to-female transmission after wound healing). Distributions for the parameters are shown in the online supplementary table S1.