Sex captures the attention of the news media so that while medical conferences
dont get much coverage in the lay press, a paper challenging the popular view about
the safety of oral sex did get a few headlines. At the recent retroviruses conference in
San Francisco, a presentation titled Primary HIV Infections Associated with Oral
Transmission from the University of California at San Francisco suggested that oral
sex is a significant route of HIV transmission.
The study was a retrospective analysis of 122 people who had recently become HIV+ and
it sought to find the probable routes of infection. Once all of the other possible routes
of infection had been eliminated (such as unprotected anal sex, anal sex with condom
breakage, substance-induced "blackouts" where behaviour could not be
determined), eight of the individuals (6.6%) were thought to have got HIV from oral sex.
All eight men had considered oral sex to be an acceptable risk.
Such a paper got the inevitable reaction from the news media that oral sex is unsafe,
whereas the study authors concluded that "oral sex may be an important mode of
transmission due to its frequency" but that "standardized investigation of HIV
transmission via oral sex is needed". What these conclusions mean is that the
relative risk of oral sex versus unprotected anal sex cannot be determined from these
data. Only a prospective study looking at a large group of people over a long period of
time and carefully following all of their sexual practices, especially oral sex and
protected and unprotected anal and vaginal sex, could determine the comparative risks. The
13-year Vancouver Lymphadenopathy Study (VLAS) of gay men showed an increased risk of
transmission for anal sex but did not show a significant increased risk for those who
reported only oral sex. That did not mean that oral sex was not a risk but the study could
not show the relationship of transmission with oral sex whereas it could for anal sex.
This finding suggested that anal sex was more risky than oral sex, but it did not say by
how much.
A retrospective study can show how people got HIV, but it does not show the relative
risk of a single activity unless it can determine the frequency of the activity. For
example, if with gay men, oral sex occurred ten times more often than unprotected anal sex
and 7% of all sexually transmitted HIV was from oral sex and 93% from anal sex, that would
mean that anal sex was 133 times more likely to transmit HIV. If a population had a very
high frequency of a low risk activity and a low frequency of a high risk activity, quite
possibly the low risk activity could cause more infections. A similar relationship could
be shown between choice of transportation: car accidents cause far more deaths than
skydiving each year, yet few people would argue skydiving was safer than being in a car.
The determination of the true risks of oral versus anal sex is problematic due to
confounding issues such as the unquantified risks of transmission from protected anal sex,
the difficulty in getting accurate reporting from individuals (who would want to admit in
2000 that they had unprotected anal or vaginal sex with someone who could be HIV+?), and
by other hidden risks such as injection drug use. Determining the relative risks of
different sexual activities is important for developing public health strategies that can
reduce the risks to all sexually active people. If there is a large difference (say, 100
times) of the risk between oral and anal sex, a safer sex message that says that both anal
and oral sex are risky could cause more infections because people might then take a chance
with anal sex because they feel they have already taken a chance with oral sex. A message
that promotes abstinence from both oral and anal sex for gay men is not likely to be
successful because adherence to such an edict will be short.
The study from San Francisco looked primarily at gay men. It is unlikely that the
information can be extrapolated to oral sex between two women or a man and a woman, where
the risk could theoretically be higher if menstrual blood were involved. Other factors
such as oral health (bleeding, sores, time of brushing or flossing), viral load,
ejaculation, ingestion of semen were not considered and they could influence the risk for
exposure at an individual level.
The study does show there is a risk to oral sex. Whether that risk is acceptable
remains the personal decision of the two people involved. Such an decision must be made
considering all the available medical and social information a serodiscordant
couple where the person with HIV has an undetectable viral load may decide the risk was
worth it whereas a woman working the streets might decide that the risk from a john of
unknown serological status wasnt worth it and she would insist that he use a condom.
Until more prospective epidemiological studies are done, the relative risk remains
unclear.