Research now confirms that the AIDS denialist policies of former South African President Thabo Mbeki contributed to the senseless death of hundreds of thousands of people. It is also well known that Mbeki’s AIDS denialist policies were underwritten by University of California biologist Peter Duesberg and his companion David Rasnick. As part of their ongoing propagation of AIDS denialism, Duesberg and Rasnick are trying to publish a paper that refutes the impact of Mbeki’s refusal to expand HIV testing, prevention and treatment in South Africa. Their paper titled “HIV-AIDS Hypothesis Out of Touch with South African AIDS – A New perspective” was originally rejected from a legitimate scientific journal and then published in a non-peer reviewed outlet (Medical Hypotheses), only to be retracted. [see posts on August 8, September 9, and September 11].
DISCLOSURE ALERT: I am the Editor of AIDS and Behavior and this paper was peer-reviewed. The full article is available FREE online.
By Pride Chigwedere and Max Essex
Published in AIDS and Behavior
We recently published a paper estimating the human cost of not using antiretroviral drugs in South Africa Questioning whether HIV causes AIDS and the safety of using antiretroviral drugs (ARVs), the South African government led by former president Thabo Mbeki withdrew government support from Gauteng clinics that had begun using zidovudine (ZDV or AZT) for preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) in 1999, restricted the use of nevirapine donated free of charge by Boehringer Ingelheim in 2000, obstructed the acquisition of grants for AIDS treatment from the Global Fund in 2002, and generally delayed implementing a national ARV treatment program until 2004.
By considering the decreasing costs of ARVs, the increasing availability of international resources to fight AIDS, and comparing South Africa to neighboring Botswana and Namibia, we conservatively estimated the number of AIDS patients that could have received ARVs for treatment or PMTCT. Factoring in the efficacy of ARVs, we concluded that from 2000 to 2005 at least 330,000 South Africans died prematurely and 35,000 babies were infected with HIV as a result of Mbeki’s policies. Independently and using a different model, Nattrass arrived at similar estimates.
Duesberg and colleagues published a critique of the study in the Journal Medical Hypotheses which was subsequently retracted by the publisher pending an investigation of the quality and global health implications of the paper. Peter Duesberg is the most well known AIDS denialist who was part of President Mbeki’s commission tasked to determine whether HIV causes AIDS in 2000, and he has recently received attention from a mainstream magazine and a whistleblower award for his AIDS denialist
67 writings.1 Consistent with earlier writings, Duesberg and colleagues:
1) Deny that HIV causes AIDS; that instead, it is a harmless passenger virus;
2) Deny that ARV drugs are useful, and therefore Mbeki’s decisions could not have harmed anyone;
3) Deny that hundreds of thousands of South Africans have died from AIDS, and thus it does not make sense to attribute 330,000 deaths to Mbeki.
We choose to respond to the issues raised above for two reasons: first, some readers may be hoodwinked by Duesberg’s dishonest arguments and think that there is a genuine debate in light of the surge in denialist coverage, and second, to emphasize the grave implications of AIDS denialism for public health practice.
Does HIV Cause AIDS?Duesberg has been denying that HIV causes AIDS for more than 20 years. President Mbeki joined the debate in 85 1999 initially by questioning whether AZT was safe for use by pregnant women, and then joined the denialists by questioning whether HIV was the ‘‘real’’ cause of AIDS as a way of broadening the debate from the usefulness of AZT to the usefulness of all antiretroviral drugs in fighting the AIDS epidemic, since they all target HIV. He then appointed Duesberg and others to a commission to examine whether HIV causes AIDS. Whether HIV causes AIDS is therefore at the very center of the policies implemented by Mbeki.
The evidence that HIV causes AIDS has been available for over 20 years. Careful epidemiological studies showing that individuals with a new, severe immunosuppressive disease clustered among homosexual men, intravenous drug users, female sexual contacts of drug users, hemophiliacs, other recipients of blood transfusion products, and newborn babies suggested that the cause was an infectious agent transmitted by body fluids. Early suggestions that illicit drugs or immune reactions to sperm were the cause could not explain all the patient groups affected by the immunosuppression.
HIV has satisfied Koch’s postulates, the traditional standard of infectious disease causation. To satisfy Koch’s postulates, one has to isolate the infectious agent from diseased animals, culture it in the lab, inoculate the agent into healthy animals which then develop disease, and reisolate the same infectious agent.
The above data have been presented and debated over the last 25 years. Duesberg’s response has been to ignore or deny the data that does not support his position, and to cherry-pick statements from studies and present them out of context to suggest that the evidence for HIV causation is unconvincing. His early argument was that HIV had not satisfied Koch’s postulates for infectious disease causation, and he also indicated several aspects of the pathogenesis that were not understood then.
When Darby and colleagues published mortality data in the complete UK population of 6,278 hemophiliacs showing that those with HIV had 10 times the mortality of those without with 85% of the deaths attributable to HIV, journal editors who had hoped this was an honest debate asked whether Duesberg was going to concede defeat. He did not. He just moved the goal posts and suggested that AZT was the cause of AIDS; the approach that he had agreed to of using ‘‘hemophilia as the best test’’ was no longer relevant.
One of his remaining arguments is that if there is no AIDS vaccine, which some predicted we would have soon after the discovery of HIV in 1984, then HIV does not cause AIDS. The same reasoning could of course be used to argue that Plasmodium falciparum does not cause malaria, as there is no malaria vaccine.
What therefore causes AIDS, in Duesberg’s opinion? His answers are inconsistent and contradictory. On the one hand, he seems to argue that AIDS (the syndrome) does not exist at all, labeling it ‘‘a fabricated epidemic,’’ since all opportunistic infections that define it already existed before AIDS. On the other hand, he also concedes that AIDS exists and offers causes, and seems unbothered by posing mutually exclusive arguments at the same time.
However, AIDS has affected the well-off and over-nourished Africans, not just the undernourished, and this raises the question why the same explanation does not apply to other less-developed countries outside Africa that do not have as much AIDS, or earlier time periods when poverty and the attendant sanitation and nutritional problems were not any less in Africa (and other places). Moreover, AIDS is a particular type of immunosuppression with selective depletion of CD4 lymphocytes, and neither homosexuality, illicit drugs, ARVs, blood transfusions, malnutrition, nor living in Africa cause this.
hurtful, and ultimately dangerous belief system’’. Are ARVs Effective in PMTCT and AIDS Treatment?
The relevant standard of proof, the gold standard, is the clinical trial where the drug in question is compared to placebo (or alternative treatments) in a randomized controlled manner and a priori chosen outcomes analyzed]. This is why the US Food and Drug Administration requires clinical trial data before licensing any new drug. By choosing mechanisms of action, Duesberg is using inappropriate evidence, but purposefully so as to obfuscate the argument.
For Duesberg to convince impartial readers that ARVs are useless or toxic when used for PMTCT and AIDS treatment, he has to produce a properly conducted meta-analysis (the objective standard for summarizing evidence) of clinical trials (the highest grade of evidence for assessing efficacy) where the drugs were used. Obviously, he cannot produce this because numerous clinical trials and meta-analyses have already been conducted and the evidence, as shown below, is unanimous in that the benefits of ARVs outweigh the side effects.
Similarly, is it logical to infer that there has been no increase in the number of persons dying of cardiovascular diseases and cancer or that the absolute numbers of death from these diseases are small in the US, whose population has increased over the last half century?
This argument does not support Duesberg’s assertions at all. The second part of the argument quotes Statistics South Africa, which recorded an average of 12,000 deaths per year in South Africa between 1997 and 2006. The shortfall is that these data are ‘‘Findings from Death Notification.’’ First, as explained by surveillance experts, ‘‘In resource-poor countries with underdeveloped health infrastructures, reports of AIDS or HIV cases are usually not complete enough to be considered reliable measures of the scope of the epidemic’’. This simply means that the death notification system in South Africa had/has much underreporting. Indeed, the ‘‘former so called independent homelands of Transkei, Boputhatswana, Venda and Ciskei (TBVC) were not included in the reporting system until 1994’’ when the reporting system began centralization, and a new death certificate was introduced in 1998 to improve reporting.
The second shortfall is that of misclassification of deaths. AIDS patients die of the resulting opportunistic infections and cancers, and these immediate causes of death are often recorded without noting the underlying acquired immunodeficiency. According to the Medical Research Council (SA), up to 61% of HIV deaths are misclassified and the majority of them are recorded as tuberculosis and lower respiratory tract infections, which become the leading causes of death. It is apparent that Duesberg selected highly deficient statistics. [This section continues. Click here to download the entire article]
Implications
There are several implications to draw from this work. First is the translation of denialism into public health practice. One of Duesberg’s first papers questioning whether HIV causes AIDS was published in the prestigious journal Science in 1988. Some researchers initially took this as a genuine scientific debate but as Koch’s postulates were fulfilled, randomized controlled trials demonstrated the high efficacy of ARV, there was much success in PMTCT, and studies elucidated the dynamics between virus and CD4 cells, Duesberg maintained his arguments and it became clearer that he was not just a dissident scientist but a denialist. When Mbeki took up the denialists’ position in 2000, there was international outcry.
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