Revision as of 21:48, 29 August 2003 editMartinHarper (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers24,927 edits two more← Previous edit | Revision as of 21:51, 29 August 2003 edit undoMartinHarper (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers24,927 edits ===Pro-circumcision statements=== on UTI - disputedNext edit → | ||
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If circumcision does indeed reduce the incidence of UTIs, To et al. estimate that 195 circumcisions would be needed to prevent one hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life. | If circumcision does indeed reduce the incidence of UTIs, To et al. estimate that 195 circumcisions would be needed to prevent one hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life. | ||
===Pro-circumcision statements=== | |||
''this section is disputed'' | |||
The American Medical Assocation states: | |||
:There is little doubt that the uncircumcised infant is at higher risk for urinary tract infection (UTI). | |||
:(Source: American Medical Assocation, Report 10 of the Council on Scientific Affairs on Neonatal Circumcision) | |||
On his website, Dr. Schoen, a circumcision advocate, states: | |||
:Uncircumcised boys are about 10 times as likely to get serious kidney infections in the first year of life as are circumcised infants; uncircumcised older boys and men are more likely to get UTIs as well. These kidney infections are most dangerous in the first 3 months, during which time they often lead to hospitalization and can result in overwhelming blood infection and other serious infections. Kidney scarring has been shown to occur later. There is concern that future kidney failure and high blood pressure may follow infantile UTIs. Abnormal kidney function and hormonal secretion can occur with infant UTIs. Fecal contamination of the moist inner foreskin layer with bacterial attachment leads to these kidney infections. | |||
:(Source: http://www.medicirc.org/meditopics/uti/more_info_uti.html) | |||
Researchers from the University of Texas and Southwestern Medical School surveyed the incidence of UTIs in young children. They found that 95% of boys with UTIs were uncircumcised among a predominantly circumcised populace (Dallas, Texas in 1982). (Source: Ginsberg CM, and McCracken GH: Urinary tract infections in young infants. Pediatrics 69:409, 1982) | |||
Other researchers have reported similar results. (Source: Wiswell TE, Prepuce presence portends prevalence of potentially perilous periurethral pathogens, The Journal of Urology, 1992; 148: 739-42) One textbook notes: | |||
:It has become apparent that uncircumcised newborns are predisposed to urinary tract infections (UTIs) in the neonatal period. For example, in a study of 100 neonates with UTIs, Ginsburg and McCracken (1982) found that only 3 of the 62 males (5%) who developed a UTI were circumcised. Subsequently, Wiswell and colleagues (1985) studied more than 2500 male infants and found that 41 had symptomatic UTIs; of these 88% were uncircumcised. In that study, uncircumcised males were nearly 20 times more likely to develop UTIs than circumcised neonates. Other studies of larger groups of infants have corroborated these reports (Wiswell, 1992) | |||
:(Source: Walsh, Campbell's Urology, 7th ed. 1998) (Accord: Behrman, Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 16th ed. 2000: “UTIs are 10 to 15 times more common in uncircumcised infants than in circumcised infants”) | |||
Critics of the studies point out that they do not classify groups of circumcised males according to their mothers' handling of the foreskin, making it impossible to infer to link the UTIs with foreskins or to the fault of the mother. It is generally recommended not to retract the foreskin of an infant during hygiene . Hodges and Fleiss claim that "it has been proven that retraction and washing of the infant foreskin can cause urinary tract infections by irritating the mucous membranes and destroying the naturally occurring beneficial flora which protects against pathogens." They do concede, however, that no analogous risk is present in circumcised infants. | |||
If circumcision does indeed reduce the incidence of UTIs, To et al. estimate that 195 circumcisions would be needed to prevent one hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life. Extrapolations from the Dallas survey would indicate for each 20 circumcisions a hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life is prevented. | |||
== Circumcision and ]/] == | == Circumcision and ]/] == |
Revision as of 21:51, 29 August 2003
The neutrality of this article is disputed
Circumcision is now highly controversial among American medical professionals. All major medical groups in the United States now no longer recommend, and some even discourage, routine infant circumcision, because the risks are either perceived greater than the benefits (if any), or the benefits are not believed to have been sufficiently substantiated, or to be too small to justify recommending routine genital surgery.
Numerous medical studies have tried to assess the effects of circumcision. These studies are discussed below.
Phimosis and paraphimosis
There are a number of circumstances where doctors sometimes recommend circumcision. An overtight foreskin can cause problems in sex, as the foreskin may become trapped behind the glans of the penis and restrict blood flow (paraphimosis). Circumcision is the recommended remedy for this condition, which typically arises in teenagers experimenting with sex. It can be treated by a program of stretching and use of topically applied steroid creams, but this is generally considered less effective and risks later relapse. As a result, in the NHS of the U.K. it is only recommended to patients who wish to retain their foreskin for religious or sexual reasons. A newer, experimental, procedure is minor surgery to make a small slit in the foreskin without removing any tissue.
the following paragraph is disputed
Recent studies from Europe demonstrate the prevalence of balanitis and phimosis due to the low rate of circumcision. Doctors at Royal Liverpool Children’s Hospital diagnosed over 100 cases (a 4% rate) of balanitis in a 3 ½ year survey of English boys. (Source: Escala JM, Rickwood AMK. Balanitis. Brit J Urol 1989;63:196-197). Doctors from the Children’s Hospital, Sheffield found a prevlance of phimosis among uncircumcised English boys. (Source: Rickwood AMK, Hemalatha V, Batcup G, Spitz L. Phimosis in Boys. Brit J Urol 1980;52:147-150). A study conducted in Denmark examined 9,545 Danish boys between 6 and 17 years of age, and found that 4% had phimosis, (incidence of 8% among 6 year olds), 33% had preputal adhesions (63% among 6 year olds), and 5% had smegma. (Source: Øster J. Further fate of the foreskin. Arch Dis Child 1968; 43:200-203.)
Another condition that can only occur in uncircumcised males is phimosis, the inability to retract the prepuce over the glans penis. It is generally acknowledged that circumcision prevents both conditions. According to some researchers, however, a lack of understanding of the natural development of the penis has led to many misdiagnoses of phimosis. Rickwood et al. write in their 2000 paper "Towards evidence based circumcision of English boys" in the British Medical Journal :
- Too many English boys, especially those under 5 years of age, are still being circumcised because of misdiagnosis of phimosis. What is phimosis? At birth, the foreskin is almost invariably non-retractable, but this state is transient and resolves in nearly all boys as they mature. Such normality, with an unscarred and pliant preputial orifice, is clearly distinguishable from pathological phimosis, a condition unambiguously characterised by secondary cicatrisation of the orifice, usually due to balanitis xerotica obliterans. This problem, the only absolute indication for circumcision, affects some 0.6% of boys, peaks in incidence at 11 years of age, and is rarely encountered before the age of 5. (...) Strictly, only some 0.6% of boys with pathological phimosis need to be circumcised, although more relaxed criteria would allow for a similar proportion affected by recurrent balanoposthitis.
A 1968 Danish study of 9,545 boys, which distinguished between phimosis and preputial adhesion (a weaker condition which can lead to phimosis), found that both conditions steadly declined as the boys became older: While the incidence of phimosis was at 8% among 6-7 year olds, it was only at 1% among 16-17 year olds; similarly, the incidence of preputial adhesion was at 63% among 6-7 year olds, and at only 3% among 16-17 year olds. The author, Jakob Øster, concluded that, "Phimosis is seen to be uncommon in schoolboys, and the indications for operation even rarer if the normal development of the prepuce is patiently awaited. When this policy is pursued, in the majority of cases of phimosis, it is seen to be a physiological condition which gradually disappears as the tissues develop."
The following paragraph is disputed
In a 1980 study, doctors from the Children’s Hospital, Sheffield found a prevlance of phimosis among uncircumcised English boys. (Source: Rickwood AMK, Hemalatha V, Batcup G, Spitz L. Phimosis in Boys. Brit J Urol 1980;52:147-150).
Balanitis
Balanitis is inflammation of the glans penis and may occur both in circumcised and in intact males. It can lead to adhesion of the prepuce to the inflamed glans. It is generally believed to be more frequent in uncircumcised boys, even though a 1997 study by R.S. Van Howe concluded that "circumcised boys are more likely to develop balanitis" . Many studies of balanitis do not examine the subjects' genital washing habits; a 1993 study by Birley et al. did so and found that excessive genital washing with soap may be a strong contributing factor to balanitis. Escala and Rickwood, in a 1989 examination of 100 cases of balanitis, concluded: "he risk in any individual, uncircumcised boy appears to be no greater than 4% ... A policy of routine neonatal circumcision to avoid these preputial complains of childhood would be difficult to justify. We found no evidence that balanitis causes phimosis."
Skin diseases
Researchers from the Imperial College School of Medicine, Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, London, England reported the results of their study of 357 patients referred for genital skin disease:
- The most common diagnoses were psoriasis (n=94), penile infections (n=58), lichen sclerosus (n=52), lichen planus (n=39), seborrheic dermatitis (n=29), and Zoon balanitis (n=27). Less common diagnoses included squamous cell carcinoma (n=4), bowenoid papulosis (n=3), and Bowen disease (n=3). The age-adjusted odds ratio for all penile skin diseases associated with presence of the foreskin was 3.24 (95% confidence interval, 2.26-4.64).
the remainder of this section is disputed
All patients with Zoon balanitis, bowenoid papulosis, and nonspecific balanoposthitis were uncircumcised. Lichen sclerosus was diagnosed in only 1 circumcised patient. Most patients with psoriasis, lichenplanus, and seborrheic eczema (72%, 69%, and 72%, respectively) were uncircumcised at presentation. The majority of men with penile infections (84%) were uncircumcised.
- (Source: Eleanor Mallon, MRCP; David Hawkins, FRCP; Michael Dinneen, FRCS; Nicholas Francis, FRCPath; Louise Fearfield, MRCP; Roger Newson, DPhil; Christopher Bunker, FRCP, Circumcision and Genital Dermatoses, Arch Dermatol. 2000;136:350-354.)
In "Medical Department, United States Army, Surgery in World War II, Urology", links observed by clinicians in the field were surveyed and compiled. In it, the author notes that “hospital admissions for paraphimosis, phimosis, balanitis, and condyloma acuminata during 1942-1945 totaled 146,793.&;#8221; (Source: JF Patton, Medical Department, United States Army, Surgery in World War II, Urology, p. 145). The author also notes the increased seriousness of genital infections in the uncircumcised:
- A word should be said here about circumcision. Any penile lesion in the presence of a redundant prepuce may present a problem and also invites secondary infection. Phimosis was a common complication of chancroid, and dorsal slits were often necessary, followed by circumcision after the local infection subsided. Phimosis and paraphimosis unrelated to veneral disease were also encountered frequently. Soldiers in combat were seldom able to practice personal hygiene. Higher headquarters sometimes questioned the number of circumcisions performed in the theater, with emphasis on days lost from duty. But all were performed from medical necessity, and none were done electively, to the author’s knowledge. Many circumcisions, performed because of necessity in the active theaters, should have been done prophylactically before the soldier left the zone of interior."
- (Source: JF Patton, Medical Department, United States Army, Surgery in World War II, Urology , p. 64)
Circumcision and cancer
Early studies by circumcision advocates have found a reduced risk of penile cancer in circumcised males, or that their mates had a lower risk of cervical cancer; these conclusions are, however, no longer fully accepted. The idea that circumcision prevents penile cancer was first stated by Dr. Abraham Wolbarst in The Lancet (1932;1:150-3). According to Dennis Harrison of the Association for Genital Integrity, Wolbarst
- "was a prominent and influential member of the American Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis, an organization dedicated to stamping out sexual immorality. Besides the article on penile cancer, his legacy includes an opinion piece calling for sterilization of adult masturbators, and a study purporting to show that circumcision prevents epilepsy."
pro-circumcision viewpoint
this section is disputed
Studies finding a reduced risk of penile cancer in circumcised males have a long history. (Sources: Abraham Wolbarst, The Lancet 1932;1:150-3; AJ Dean, J Urol. 1935; 35:252.) Recent studies appear to confirm that view. Dr. Schoen has reviewed the results of published material relating to penile cancer and circumcision and has quantified the risk of not circumcision a newborn boy:
- The evidence that circumcision protects against penile cancer is overwhelming. In the US, incidence of penile cancer in circumcised men is essentially zero (about one reported case every five years), but it is 2.2 per 100 000 in uncircumcised men (about 1000 cases are reported annually). On the basis of life table analysis, Kochen and McCurdy estimated that an uncircumcised man in the US has a lifetime risk of penile cancer of one in 600.
- During the last 50 years in the US, six major series of cancer of the penis encompassing more than 1600 cases have been reported; none of these cancer patients was circumcised in infancy. Human papilloma virus and smegma have been implicated in the aetiology of penile cancer.10 Of the approximately 50 000 cases of cancer of the penis that have occurred in the US since the 1930s (and which resulted in about 10 000 deaths), only 10 were reported in circumcised men. Newborn circumcision virtually eliminates this devastating threat.
- (Source: Edgar J Schoen, Benefits of newborn circumcision: is Europe ignoring medical evidence?, Arch Dis Child 1997;77:258-260 ( September ); footnotes deleted.) These results are consistent with those of other researchers. (Source: Kochen M, McCurdy S. Circumcision and the risk of cancer of the penis: a life-table analysis. Am J Dis Child 1980;134:484-486.) (see also: Schoen EJ. The relationship between circumcision and cancer of the penis. CA Cancer J Clin 1991;41:306-309).
Superseding of Wolbarst
Some writers still rely on Wolbarst's work, even though his research has been superseded by well designed, controlled studies. This tendency has been criticized by medical professionals who oppose the practice. For example, circumcision opponents Paul M. Fleiss and Frederick Hodges wrote in a 1996 letter to the British Medical Journal in response to a recent paper on circumcision that relied on Wolbarst :
- Wolbarst invented this myth and was directly responsible for its proliferation; he based it on unverifiable anecdotes, ethnocentric stereotypes, a faulty understanding of human anatomy and physiology, a misunderstanding of the distinction between association and cause, and an unbridled missionary zeal. It was not based on valid scientific and epidemiological research.
- Epidemiological studies disproved Wolbarst's myth long ago. In North America the rate of penile cancer has been estimated to be 1 in 100000 (...). Maden et al. reported penile cancer among a fifth of elderly patients from rural areas who had been circumcised neonatally and had been born at a time when the rate of neonatal circumcision was about 20% in rural populations. Their study also shows that the rate of penile cancer among men circumcised neonatally has risen in the United States relative to the rise in the rate of neonatal circumcision.
The American Cancer Society noted in a 1998 statement :
- "he penile cancer risk is low in some uncircumcised populations, and the practice of circumcision is strongly associated with socio-ethnic factors, which in turn are associated with lessened risk. The consensus among studies that have taken these other factors into account is circumcision is not of value in preventing cancer of the penis.
- "Proven penile cancer risk factors include having unprotected sexual relations with multiple partners (increasing the likelihood of human papillomavirus infection), and cigarette smoking."
the following two paragraphs are disputed
Doctors and researchers on the other side of the debate are active too. Dr. Dagher in an article detailing the high mortality of penile cancer (1/3 of the surveyed patients died), noted:
- Despite overwhelming evidence from urological surgeons that neoplasm of the penis is a lethal disease that can be prevented by removal of the foreskin, some physicians continue to argue against routine neonatal circumcision in a highly emotional and aggressive fashion.
- (Source: Dagher, R., et al., Carcinoma of the cervix and the anti-circumcison crusade. J. Urol. 110:79-80, July 1973)
Some medical professionals continue to promote routine infant circumcision on the basis that it prevents penile cancer. Circumcision advocate Edgar Schoen has tried to quantify this association:
- In the US, incidence of penile cancer in circumcised men is essentially zero (about one reported case every five years), but it is 2.2 per 100 000 in uncircumcised men (about 1000 cases are reported annually). On the basis of life table analysis, Kochen and McCurdy estimated that an uncircumcised man in the US has a lifetime risk of penile cancer of one in 600.
- During the last 50 years in the US, six major series of cancer of the penis encompassing more than 1600 cases have been reported; none of these cancer patients was circumcised in infancy. Human papilloma virus and smegma have been implicated in the aetiology of penile cancer. Of the approximately 50,000 cases of cancer of the penis that have occurred in the US since the 1930s (and which resulted in about 10,000 deaths), only 10 were reported in circumcised men.
Rowena Hitchcock of the Department of Paediatric Surgery, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, responded in a commentary to Schoen's analysis:
- Circumcision as an alternative to hygiene in prevention of penile carcinoma is an oft voiced argument. The author has quoted figures based on the 1971 national cancer survey (US) and extrapolated from the unsupported assumption that all penile carcinomas occurred in uncircumcised males. More recent data calculate the relative risk in the US to be 3.2 times greater in the intact male. Using the author's own source, the quoted incidence of penile carcinoma in the US was one per 100,000 (1969-71). This is a comparable incidence with that in Finland at the same time, where the circumcision rate is less than 1%, of 0.5 per 100,000 (1970) with a 78% relative 20 year survival rate. Thus, I find Marshall's argument at a meeting of the Society for Paediatric Urology, that one would have to perform 140 circumcisions a week, for 25 years, to prevent one case of carcinoma of the penis, enough to prevent me from setting out on such a course.
Those who believe circumcision to prevent penile cancer have often proposed smegma as a causative agent, however, as of 1963, it was conclusively proven that smegma is not carcinogenic (by injecting it into animal wounds). Lastly, circumcision itself is not a riskless procedure, so its risks have to be compared to those of penile cancer. In the United States there are more annual fatalities from circumcision complications than from penile cancer , and this simple comparison does not take into account that there remains at least some (if not the entire) risk of penile cancer after the procedure. No statistically significant difference in the incidence of penile cancer has been found between nations that circumcise and those that do not.
Cervical cancer and HPV
The claim that circumcision reduces cervical cancer in female partners remains controversial. It was first put forward by Wynder et al. in 1954, with smegma as the hypothesized causative agent, but later relativated because female subjects gave incorrect information about the circumcision status of their partners (even a substantial number of males in the US fail to properly identify their circumcision status). Stern and Neely disproved the hypothesis that smegma causes cervical cancer in female partners in 1962 . In 1996, the American Cancer Society stated: "Research suggesting a pattern in the circumcision status of partners of women with cervical cancer is methodologically flawed, outdated and has not been taken seriously in the medical community for decades."
Cervical cancer has been related to the presence of HPV infection. On this basis, an alternative hypothesis for the reduction of cervical cancer through circumcision has been proposed; namely, that there is a higher HPV infection rate among uncircumcised men. An international group of researchers conducted a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine that concluded:
- Male circumcision is associated with a reduced risk of penile HPV infection and, in the case of men with a history of multiple sexual partners, a reduced risk of cervical cancer in their current female partners.
The study has elicited a strong response from anti-circumcision advocates. A detailed analysis from the Internet group "Circumstitions" , for example, criticized especially the pooling of data from countries with very different circumcision rates. The only country with a high circumcision rate in the sample were the Philippines, so that the comparison of circumcision rate and HPV rate is also a comparison of HPV rate in the Philippines and HPV rate in other countries. According to critics, this makes it crucial to examine other social, economic, demographic and environmental factors on the Philippines that might explain the lower HPV infection rate.
the following paragraph is disputed
Researchers from the Danish Cancer Registry, Copenhagen, studied women with only one lifetime sexual partner to determine which male factors had an influence on a woman’s risk for contracting cervical cancer and found that her partner’s lack of circumcision was such a factor. (Source: Kjaer SK, de Villiers EM, Dahl C, Engholm G, Bock JE, Vestergaard BF, Lynge E, Jensen OM, Case-control study of risk factors for cervical neoplasia in Denmark. I: Role of the "male factor" in women with one lifetime sexual partner, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Volume 48, Number 1: Pages 39-44, April 22, 1991.) The study has elicited a strong response from lay anti-circumcision advocates. A detailed analysis from the Internet group "Circumstitions" , for example, criticized especially the pooling of data from countries with very different circumcision rates. The only country with a high circumcision rate in the sample were the Philippines, so that the comparison of circumcision rate and HPV rate is also a comparison of HPV rate in the Philippines and HPV rate in other countries. According to critics, this makes it crucial to examine other social, economic, demographic and environmental factors on the Philippines that might explain the lower HPV infection rate.
There was no statistically significant risk of cervical cancer for partners of uncircumcised men; there was a 0.23 to 0.79 risk (CI 95%) for partners of uncircumcised men with a history of multiple partners (the population of women was previously limited to those with few partners). Critics see this type of limiting of populations to find the one that matches a given hypothesis as problematic and note that again, cultural and reporting differences may explain the difference given that about 80% of circumcised men were from the Philippine sample (it should be pointed out that the Philippines are a highly religious country, so women may be less likely to report having had multiple partners, which again would distort the results, as women who reported having multiple partners were not included in the cervical cancer analysis). Media commentator Dr. Dean Edell summarized the study like this: "If you are an intact male, have had lots of unprotected sex with lots of different women and marry a virgin, your wife may have a real but statistically insignificant increased chance of getting HPV."
Circumcision and Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Infections of the urinary tract (kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra) can lead to kidney damage if undetected, but can generally be treated effectively with antibiotics. Recent studies find a three to seven times increased risk of uncircumcised UTIs in male infants within the first year of life. A 1998 Canadian population based cohort study by To et al. , for example, reported a relative risk of 3.7. The overall incidence of UTIs in infants was low, 1.88 and 7.02 per 1000 respectively. According to the American Medical Association, "There is little doubt that the uncircumcised infant is at higher risk for urinary tract infection (UTI)."
These studies have nevertheless been extensively criticized for their methodology. The American Academy of Pediatrics noted in its 1999 circumcision policy statement:
- Few of the studies that have evaluated the association between UTI in male infants and circumcision status have looked at potential confounders (such as prematurity, breastfeeding, and method of urine collection) in a rigorous way. For example, because premature infants appear to be at increased risk for UTI, the inclusion of hospitalized premature infants in a study population may act as a confounder by suggesting an increased risk of UTI in uncircumcised infants. Premature infants usually are not circumcised because of their fragile health status. In another example, breastfeeding was shown to have a threefold protective effect on the incidence of UTI in a sample of uncircumcised infants. However, breastfeeding status has not been evaluated systematically in studies assessing UTI and circumcision status.
UTI is usually detected through urine tests. Depending on the method of urine collection, there is a varying risk of false positives through contamination. The bacteria detected may in fact come from the foreskin itself, not the urinary tract. In spite of this, an increased risk of UTI in uncircumcised males is generally considered plausible, a higher likelihood of bacterial colonization being the proposed mechanism.
However, studies of UTI and circumcision do not classify groups of circumcised males according to their mothers' handling of the foreskin, making it impossible to infer any link with specific hygienic practices. It is generally recommended not to retract the foreskin of an infant during hygiene . Hodges and Fleiss claim that "it has been proven that retraction and washing of the infant foreskin can cause urinary tract infections by irritating the mucous membranes and destroying the naturally occurring beneficial flora which protects against pathogens."
If circumcision does indeed reduce the incidence of UTIs, To et al. estimate that 195 circumcisions would be needed to prevent one hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life.
Pro-circumcision statements
this section is disputed
The American Medical Assocation states:
- There is little doubt that the uncircumcised infant is at higher risk for urinary tract infection (UTI).
- (Source: American Medical Assocation, Report 10 of the Council on Scientific Affairs on Neonatal Circumcision)
On his website, Dr. Schoen, a circumcision advocate, states:
- Uncircumcised boys are about 10 times as likely to get serious kidney infections in the first year of life as are circumcised infants; uncircumcised older boys and men are more likely to get UTIs as well. These kidney infections are most dangerous in the first 3 months, during which time they often lead to hospitalization and can result in overwhelming blood infection and other serious infections. Kidney scarring has been shown to occur later. There is concern that future kidney failure and high blood pressure may follow infantile UTIs. Abnormal kidney function and hormonal secretion can occur with infant UTIs. Fecal contamination of the moist inner foreskin layer with bacterial attachment leads to these kidney infections.
Researchers from the University of Texas and Southwestern Medical School surveyed the incidence of UTIs in young children. They found that 95% of boys with UTIs were uncircumcised among a predominantly circumcised populace (Dallas, Texas in 1982). (Source: Ginsberg CM, and McCracken GH: Urinary tract infections in young infants. Pediatrics 69:409, 1982)
Other researchers have reported similar results. (Source: Wiswell TE, Prepuce presence portends prevalence of potentially perilous periurethral pathogens, The Journal of Urology, 1992; 148: 739-42) One textbook notes:
- It has become apparent that uncircumcised newborns are predisposed to urinary tract infections (UTIs) in the neonatal period. For example, in a study of 100 neonates with UTIs, Ginsburg and McCracken (1982) found that only 3 of the 62 males (5%) who developed a UTI were circumcised. Subsequently, Wiswell and colleagues (1985) studied more than 2500 male infants and found that 41 had symptomatic UTIs; of these 88% were uncircumcised. In that study, uncircumcised males were nearly 20 times more likely to develop UTIs than circumcised neonates. Other studies of larger groups of infants have corroborated these reports (Wiswell, 1992)
- (Source: Walsh, Campbell's Urology, 7th ed. 1998) (Accord: Behrman, Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 16th ed. 2000: “UTIs are 10 to 15 times more common in uncircumcised infants than in circumcised infants”)
Critics of the studies point out that they do not classify groups of circumcised males according to their mothers' handling of the foreskin, making it impossible to infer to link the UTIs with foreskins or to the fault of the mother. It is generally recommended not to retract the foreskin of an infant during hygiene . Hodges and Fleiss claim that "it has been proven that retraction and washing of the infant foreskin can cause urinary tract infections by irritating the mucous membranes and destroying the naturally occurring beneficial flora which protects against pathogens." They do concede, however, that no analogous risk is present in circumcised infants.
If circumcision does indeed reduce the incidence of UTIs, To et al. estimate that 195 circumcisions would be needed to prevent one hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life. Extrapolations from the Dallas survey would indicate for each 20 circumcisions a hospital admission for UTI in the first year of life is prevented.
Circumcision and HIV/AIDS
In 1986 Aaron J. Fink, a circumcision advocate, first proposed that circumcision might prevent the distribution of AIDS. He hypothesized that the keratinization of the circumcised penis might prevent HIV infection. Other researchers soon investigated the question whether there is a link between circumcision and HIV infection rates.
After more than 40 studies, the evidence has remained largely inconclusive. The American Medical Association states:
- "The data on circumcision status and susceptibility to HIV infection and other sexually transmissible diseases have been recently reviewed. Five of 7 prospective studies involving heterosexual transmission of HIV-1 found a statistically significant association between lack of circumcision and elevated risk for acquisition of HIV." (Report 10 of the Council on Scientific Affairs on Neonatal Circumcision, )
Several studies of African populations found a significantly reduced risk of HIV transmission in circumcised males. For example, in a 1988 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers studied patients appearing at a Nairobi, Kenya, STD clinic. They found "en who were uncircumcised were more likely to have HIV infection (odds ratio, 2.7; P = 0.003)" .
At least 16 studies found no statistically significant link between circumcision and HIV transmission, and four studies found an increased risk in circumcised males. Studies have mostly focused on the female-to-male heterosexual transmission. It is axiomatic that possession (or not) of a foreskin does not influence transmission rates associated with the non-insertional partner's acquisition of HIV/AIDS through anal, vaginal, or oral sex, or any partner through pregnancy, nursing, blood transfusions, needle sticks or sharing needles.
The ongoing research has been extensively methodologically criticized. The main criticism is that past studies have ignored substantial confounding variables. Perhaps most notably, most studies have not controlled for different socio-sexual behaviors. In their meta-analysis of related studies , Vincenzi and Mertens note that "circumcision is not performed randomly". Circumcision in central Africa is primarily a Muslim practice, and Islam requires ritual washing, marital fidelity and periodic abstinence from sex. Similar relationships have been found in other cultures that practice male circumcision . In addition, in many studies, the circumcision status of subjects has not been directly verified. The authors of the meta-analysis conclude that there is not sufficient evidence for a link between circumcision and HIV transmission. Similarly, Van Howe in another 1999 meta-analysis concludes that "the recommendation to routinely circumcise boys in Africa is unfounded and even dangerous."
Studies have also failed to control for the specific practice of "dry sex" (vaginal lubrication is dried out by various means, presumably to heighten the male's sexual pleasure), which is common among uncircumcised males in sub-Saharan Africa. Dry sex increases HIV infection risk dramatically. Other confounding factors that have been cited as possibly relevant are regionally prevalent diseases and "female circumcision", the effects of which on HIV transmission have not been investigated. It has also been claimed that circumcision changes sexual behavior directly, either leading to more or less risky sexual behavior. Because of these criticisms and the inconclusive results, no medical body has so far accepted circumcision as a means to reduce HIV transmission.
Among industrialized nations, AIDS rates are highest in the three countries which still practice routine infant circumcision at substantial levels (table 2). Circumcision critics point to this data not as evidence that circumcision is in any relationship to HIV infections, but that use of safe sex practices far outweighs any beneficial effect circumcision may or may not have. Critics also warn that advertising circumcision as a way to prevent AIDS (e.g. "could potentially save millions of men and their partners", as a unversity press release claims) might be used to promote and justify the belief that safe sex practices are unnecessary.
World Health Organization data of AIDS rates for 1995 | |
Nation | AIDS cases per 100,000 pop. |
USA | 16.0 |
Australia | 4.5 |
Canada | 3.8 |
France | 3.5 |
Netherlands | 3.1 |
United Kingdom | 2.4 |
Germany | 2.2 |
Sweden | 2.0 |
Norway | 1.6 |
New Zealand | 1.2 |
Finland | 0.9 |
Japan | 0.2 |
Medical complications of circumcision
While all benefits associated with circumcision are controversial, the procedure has risks. Complications of circumcision are relatively rare. They range from bleeding, infections, disfigurement, scarring and sexual dysfunction through severe mutilation of the penis, to (in few cases) death. Williams and Kapila observe:
- Some authors have reported a complication rate as low as 0.06 per cent while at the other extreme rates of up to 55 per cent have been quoted. This reflects the differing and varying diagnostic criteria employed; a realistic figure is 2-10 per cent. Although haemorrhage and sepsis are the main causes of morbidity, the variety of complications is enormous. The literature abounds with reports of morbidity and even death as a result of circumcision.
It has been claimed that deaths that are the indirect result of a circumcision (e.g. infections of the circumcision wound) are often not registered as a complication. The overall number of deaths from circumcision per year is unknown, but it has been estimated by circumcision-critical health professionals to be over 200 per year in the United States ,. Circumcision advocates dispute these numbers and claim that if they were true, a large outcry would already have resulted.
In countries with lower medical standards, complication rates are higher, and historically, circumcision has been a risky procedure. The Talmud grants an exemption from circumcision if the first three sons died from it .
Several extreme cases of circumcision complications have been documented in the scientific literature. Perhaps best known is the case of "Bruce/Brenda/David", an infant whose genitalia were amputated after a botched circumcision and who was then raised as a girl, with severe traumatic consequences. The case has been documented by John Colapinto in the book As Nature Made Him.
Long term effects of circumcision
Meatal stenosis is a condition that is "exceedingly rare" in intact males, yet occurs in 9-10% of males who are circumcised at birth. It is caused by exposure of the meatus to urine or by rubbing against the diaper. The disorder "is characterized by an upward deflected, difficult-to-aim urinary stream and, occasionally, dysuria and urgent, frequent, and prolonged urination. Surgical meatotomy is curative." Meatal stenosis usually occurs too late to be registered as a circumcision complication. Meatitis (inflammation of the meatus) is also more common in circumcised boys.
The process of keratinization after circumcision is well known and negatively affects the sexual sensitivity of the glans to stimulation. This effect of the procedure is sometimes presented as an advantage (prolonging the sexual act) or as a disadvantage (decrease in sensation). In a study of adult males who decided to become circumcised (in 84% cases due to medical conditions), 38% reported negative outcomes such as decreased sensitivity and erectile dysfunction . Of course, circumcisions to correct severe phimosis and paraphimosis tend to enable sexual functioning that was previously painful or impossible.
Because the foreskin acts as a natural lubricant, uncircumcised men and boys can usually masturbate without any external aids by simply sliding the foreskin back and forth over the glans. Circumcised men frequently have to resort to using a lubricant and other techniques. With total foreskin amputation, which is no longer common, erection can become painful or even impossible as the remaining skin is stretched to its limits. This effect on masturbation and sexual behavior was alluded to in early circumcision advocacy (see below).
O'Hara and O'Hara have conducted a survey among women who had sex with both circumcised and uncircumcised males, and found that 85.5% preferred intact partners. Women reported having had more single and multiple orgasms with uncircumcised men, and less vaginal discomfort. Specifically regarding the loss of vaginal secretion in partners of circumcised men, the authors write :
- When the anatomically complete penis thrusts in the vagina, it does not slide, but rather glides on its own 'bedding' of movable skin, in much the same way that a turtle's neck glides in and out of the folder layers of skin surrounding it. The underlying corpus cavernosa and corpus spongiosum slide within the penile skin, while the skin juxtaposed against the vaginal wall moves very little. This sheath-within-a-sheath alignment allows penile movement, and vaginal and penile stimulation, with minimal friction or loss of secretions.
Circumcision without anaesthesia is believed by many child psychologists and neurologists to have severe long term traumatic effects. However, circumcision is usually practiced today with local anaesthesia.
Statements by health groups
The American Academy of Pediatrics created a Task Force on Circumcision, which issued an official policy statement. The abstract of their statement reads:
- "Existing scientific evidence demonstrates potential medical benefits of newborn male circumcision; however, these data are not sufficient to recommend routine neonatal circumcision. In circumstances in which there are potential benefits and risks, yet the procedure is not essential to the child's current well-being, parents should determine what is in the best interest of the child. To make an informed choice, parents of all male infants should be given accurate and unbiased information and be provided the opportunity to discuss this decision. If a decision for circumcision is made, procedural analgesia should be provided."
The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued a statement in 1997 that "newborn circumcision is an elective procedure to be performed at the request of the parents on baby boys who are physiologically and clinical stable."
The American Academy of Family Physicians Reference Manual states: "Current medical literature regarding neonatal circumcision is controversial and conflicting. The decision to perform neonatal circumcision should be based on the informed consent of the parents, and requires objective, factual counseling of parents by the family physician."
In recent years the American Cancer Society has come out against routine circumcision. "We would like to discourage the American Academy of Pediatrics from promoting routine circumcision as a preventive measure for penile or cervical cancer...Perpetuating the mistaken belief that circumcision prevents cancer is inappropriate." The American Academy of Pediatrics no longer promotes routine circumcision.
The American Medical Assocation states:
- There is little doubt that the uncircumcised infant is at higher risk for urinary tract infection (UTI), although the magnitude of this risk is debatable... Despite the increased relative risk in uncircumcised infants, the absolute incidence of UTI is small in this population... One model of decision analysis concluded that the incidence of UTI would have to be substantially higher in uncircumcised males to justify circumcision as a preventive measure against this condition.
- The data on circumcision status and susceptibility to HIV infection and other sexually transmissible diseases have been recently reviewed. Five of 7 prospective studies involving heterosexual transmission of HIV-1 found a statistically significant association between lack of circumcision and elevated risk for acquisition of HIV... At least 16 studies have examined the relationship between circumcision and sexually transmissible diseases other than HIV. In general, circumcised individuals appear to have somewhat lower susceptibility to acquiring chancroid and syphilis, possibly genital herpes, and gonorrhea compared to individuals in whom the foreskin is intact... Regardless of these findings, behavioral factors are far more important risk factors for acquisition of HIV and other sexually transmissible diseases than circumcision status.
- (Source: American Medical Assocation, Report 10 of the Council on Scientific Affairs on Neonatal Circumcision)