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HIV
Oral
Sex Poses Low HIV Risk
Study fails to find any infected people
Newsday - August 15, 2001, Laurie Garrett, Staff Correspondent
Atlanta - Oral sex poses an extremely low
risk of HIV infection, according to a study released yesterday at the
second National HIV Prevention Conference here.
Kimberly Page Schafer and her colleagues at the University of California
at San Francisco have reached that conclusion after two years of searching
for someone who has acquired HIV from oral sex. After two years and nearly
200 individuals closely studied, Schafer said in an interview,
"Everyone has come up negative.
"Oral sex is safer," Schafer said. "You can get other
sexually transmitted diseases from oral sex, such as gonorrhea, syphilis,
chlamydia and herpes. But it appears that the risk from oral sex for HIV
is an order of magnitude lower than for anal sex."
Schafer's group intended to put together a study comparing people who got
HIV from oral sex to those who did not, and then search for factors that
could explain the difference. For two years they combed sex clubs and HIV
clinics from San Diego to San Francisco searching for men and women whose
sole sexual activities are oral.
The 198 participants, 194 of whom are men, have a mean of three different
sex partners in six months, engaging in multiple oral sex encounters.
Statistically, they are far more sexually active than the average
American. It is a group at high risk for HIV, since 20 percent of them
report knowingly having sex with HIV-positive men, and many more admit to
not knowing the HIV status of one or more partners.
Yet only one of the 198 individuals was HIV-positive, and a sophisticated
test showed he had become infected years before, at a time when he
practiced anal intercourse.
In a separate UCSF mathematical modeling study, Drs. Susan Buchbinder and
Eric Vittinghoff calculated that the odds of acquiring HIV from any single
act of oral sex with an infected partner are roughly four in 10,000,
compared with odds of four in 1,000 for anal sex with a condom.
Schafer said, "Many people, especially in the gay community, turn to
oral sex as a safer alternative in the age of AIDS. And with HIV rates
rising, people need to remember that oral sex is safer sex. It's a
reasonable alternative."
As part of their study the UCSF team is collecting saliva from all study
participants, which is being analyzed for factors that may control or
destroy HIV. At least four types of chemicals found in human saliva
destroy HIV, or render it immobile in test tube studies. Nobody knows
whether any of these chemicals are active in real life.
It is possible that the group studied was skewed to people who are more
health-conscious when it comes to testing for HIV. Schafer discovered that
most of the 198 individuals in her study had undergone previous HIV tests,
and came to the study in hopes of being tested again. They were also far
more likely than the average individual to have seen a dentist within the
last six months. Exactly how those attitudes may have influenced the
results isn't clear.
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