Friday, June 22, 2012

Birth control and HIV risk: What women AND men should know


 Until now, complaints about hormonal birth control – mood swings, nausea, breast tenderness – have almost exclusively come from the woman taking the hormones. However, recent findings about one popular type of birth control should have women and their intimate partners equally concerned. The issue is with a potentially considerable increased risk of HIV infection for both the woman and her partner, and the new research even has some HIV/AIDS scientists saying “I told you so.”
I will be interested to watch the trends in Pfizer stocks in the coming days, because it’s their injectable long-acting contraceptive, Depo-Provera, that is at the heart of a controversial new study in Lancet Infectious Diseases. A team based at the University of Washington in Seattle assessed nearly 4,000 couples in seven sub-Saharan African countries for rates of HIV acquisition and transmission, and the findings were pretty clear cut: women using long-acting progesterone-based birth control or low-dose combination hormonal oral contraceptives were twice as likely to acquire HIV, and their male partners were twice as likely to contract the virus from them.
The Depo-Provera shot, used by over 90 million women worldwide, is made convenient by the fact that it only needs to be administered once every three months to be effective. The active ingredient in the shot is the hormone progesterone, which is normally at its highest levels during the second half of a woman’s menstrual cycle. As a contraceptive, progesterone acts by thinning the uterine wall so that a fertilized egg cannot attach. However, this hormone also thins the vaginal wall, which may make it easier for the HIV virus to infect uninfected women and to be passed on to their male partners thereafter.
So why are some scientists basically saying “I told you so”? Well, fifteen years ago in 1996, a study was published in Nature Medicine (a well-read journal) that showed female rhesus monkeys with progesterone implants had 7.7 times the risk of contracting simian immunodeficiency virus (essentially monkey HIV) compared to monkeys implanted with placebo.
“How many years has it been that the non-human primate model, and other researchers, have been warning about this and being ignored? What, 15 years now? Shocking.” - John Moore, HIV scientist at Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, in an email to colleagues and journalists on October 5.
The WHO will meet early next year to decide whether to revise the recommendation for injectable contraceptive use in HIV-positive women and women partners of HIV-positive men. But why weren’t these issues considered 15 years ago, when the study in monkeys came out? The first author of that study, Preston Marx, says it’s because nobody wanted to deal with a threat to a cheap and accessible contraceptive method with numerous benefits in developing countries. He says,
“I was in one meeting accused of massaging the data. It was real heat.”
On the other side of the debate, professionals in public health and epidemiology point out that hormonal contraceptive use was low among the cohort studied (anywhere between 15-33% of women depending on the time point in the study). Also, birth control is of especially great benefit in developing countries where unwanted pregnancies can bring serious harm or even death to the pregnant woman.
That said, this is clearly a very controversial finding with incredibly far-reaching implications, depending on what follow-up studies conclude. At the very least, women everywhere who are on birth control or considering it, as well as the partners of those women, should be aware of this ongoing debate.
In the interest of being balanced, check out this story about what people consider the confounding factors in this study: “The Faulty Birth-Control-HIV Link” in The Daily Beast.