VIRUSMYTH HOMEPAGE
THE HIV GAP IN NATIONAL AIDS STATISTICS
By Peter H. Duesberg
Bio/Technology 11 Aug. 1993
The HIV-AIDS hypothesis rests on the assertion that all AIDS cases are
associated with HIV (Confronting AIDS-Update 1988, Natl. Acad. Sci.
Press, Wash., D.C.; Blattner, W., et al., 1988, Science 241, 514-515;
Weiss, R. and Jaffe, H., 1990, Nature 345, 659-660; Duesberg, P.H.,
1992, Pharmacol. Ther. 55, 201-277). Therefore, the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) groups American AIDS cases in its HIV/AIDS Surveillance
into "exposure (to HIV) categories." However, there are no national
AIDS statistics that document the natural coincidence between AIDS diseases
and HIV. Contrary to its title, the HIV/AIDS Surveillance of the
CDC does not report HIV tests. Correlations between HIV and AIDS can only
be determined from individual studies and from those CDC AIDS case report
forms that include HIV tests.
But most "HIV tests" measure antibodies against HIV rather
than the virus itself. And antibodies are not unambiguous evidence for
the presence of a virus, nor are they rational predictors for viral disease.
Instead antibodies neutralize HIV and restrict the virus to latency. This
is the reason that leading AIDS researchers have had notorious difficulties
in isolating HIV, even in people dying from AIDS (Weiss, R., 1991, Nature
349, 374; Cohen, J., 1993, Science 259, 168-170).
Moreover, antibody tests generate false-positive results if an epitope
is shared between different organisms. According to a recent review entitled
"HIV testing: State of the Art," "depending on the population
tested, 20 to 70% of...two successive positive ELISAs (enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay) are confirmed by Western blot (an alternative antibody assay)."
(Sloand, E.M., et al., 1991, JAMA 266, 2861-2866)
In a population with a low probability of infection, the false-positive
rate is high. According to the widely cited study of applicants to the
U.S. Army by Burke et al., 83% of all initially positive ELISAs (10,000/12,000)
were false-positives (New Eng. J. Med. 319, 961-964, 1988).
In a population with a high incidence of infection, however, the false-positive
rate is expected to be low. Therefore the CDC assumes that "the tiny
proportion of possibly false-positive screening tests in persons with AIDS-indicative
diseases is of little consequence" (Confronting AIDS-Update 1988).
But this is not observed.
For example, one study documented 131 repeatedly ELISA-positive homosexual
men with negative Western blots in a cohort of 4,994 homosexuals of which
37% were HIV-positive (Phair, J., et al., 1992, J. AIDS 5, 988-992).
Another study "found HIV-I infection in only 4 (12.5%) of 32 high-risk
cases" with repeatedly positive ELISAs (Cehim, C.,I., et al., 1991,
J Infect. Dis. 164, 656-664). HIV infection was negative by Western
blot, provirus amplification with the polymerase chain reaction (PCR),
and virus isolation tests. Another study identified 33 ELISA-positive and
even Western blot-positive subjects who were HIV-negative based on the
PCR test for HIV DNA (Schechter, M., et al., 1991, AIDS 5, 373-379).
These subjects were from a group of 316 homosexuals of which 158 (50%)
were PCR-positive.
The relatively high incidence of false-positive HIV antibody tests in
these HIV risk groups probably reflects the presence of antibodies to other
viruses and microbes that may cross-react with HIV. For example, 7 out
of 10 blood donors treated with an influenza virus vaccine in 1991 became
HIV ELISA-positive. Each of these proved to be false-positives upon confirmation
with a Western blot (Mac Kenzie, W.R., et al., 1992, JAMA 268, 1015-1017).
Since the CDC "...accepts a reactive screening test for HIV antibody
without confirmation by a supplemental test..." (Confronting AIDS-Update
1988) and does not request a repeatedly positive antibody test in its "AIDS
adult confidential case report" forms, it includes false-positives
in its HIV/AIDS Surveillance.
In fact, the CDC even includes AIDS cases in its HIV/AIDS Surveillance
"without laboratory evidence regarding HIV infection" (Confronting
AIDS-Update 1988). Upon request, the CDC's director of the HIV/AIDS
division, Harold Jaffe, stated that the HIV status of 43,606 out of the
253,448 American AIDS cases recorded by the end of 1992 was "not tested"
(per. com., 1993). However this figure seems to be an understatement. Obviously,
all 10,360 American AIDS cases diagnosed before the HIV antibody test,
i.e., before 1985, were not tested (HIV/AIDS Surveillance, February
1993). In addition, the CDC published that "Approximately one third
of AIDS patients in the United States have been from New York and San Francisco,
where, since 1985, 7% have been reported with HIV-antibody test results,
compared with 60% in other areas" (Confronting AIDS-Update
1988). Thus, between 1985 and 1987, 58% (93% x 1/3 + 40% x 2/3) of the
56,807 AIDS cases recorded in that period, or 32,948, have not been tested.
For 1988, the CDC reported that 27% or 9,039 of the 33,480 AIDS cases recorded
for that year were not tested for HIV (Selik, R. M., et al., 1990, J.
AIDS 3, 73-82). According to the CDC's Technical Information Activity,
3682 AIDS cases without an HIV-test were recorded in 1989, 2888 in 1990,
1960 in 1991, and 1395 in 1992 (per. com., 1993). Thus, at least 62,272,
or 18,666 more than Jaffe reports, were not tested.
Determination of the HIV-AIDS correlation is further obscured because
HIV-free AIDS cases are not recorded in the CDC's HIV/AIDS Surveillance.
By 1993, at least 4621 HIV-free AIDS cases had been documented in the.S.,
Europe, and Africa with the clinical AIDS definition (Table 1). Even Jaffe,
again upon request, reported 89 HIV-free AIDS cases (per. com., 1993).
The cases recorded in Table 1 suffered from one or more of the over 25
heterogeneous AIDS-defining diseases and from AIDS-defining immunodeficiencies
without diseases. Some of these proved to be HIV-free even by PCR amplification
of viral RNA and DNA.
TABLE 1:
HIV-free AIDS-defining diseases and immunodeficiencies
Risk Group U.S. &
Canada | Europe | Africa (References*)
Homosexuals 722
| 37 | (1-22/23-26,74)
Intravenous (IV) drug users 251 | 335 | (18-20,27-35,75/36-39,74)
Infants of IV drug users 55 | 11
| (40-43/44,45)
Hemophiliacs 256
| 78 | (46-58/57-61)
None/unreported 307
| 14 | 2555 (16-21,62-67/21,68/26,69-73)
TOTALS 1591
| 475 | 2555
SUM TOTAL 4521
Table 1 includes some American and European immunodeficiencies that
may not exactly fit the current definition of AIDS defining immunodeficiency
without disease, which is 200 T-cells per microliter (CDC, 1992, MMWR 41,
RR 17, 1-19), as for example, HIV-free male homosexuals on various recreations
drugs with "X cells per cubic millimeter" (Table 1, ref. 14)
or HIV-negative hemophiliacs with T4/T8 cell ratios of about 1 or 1 (Table
1, refs. 46-61). But even if not all of these cases fit the current definition
of AIDS-defining immunodeficiency exactly, they do so prospectively. This
is because their T-cells typically continue to decline either because of
risk behavior, such as the consumption of recreational drugs, or because
of clinical AIDS risks, such as chronic transfusion of foreign proteins
as prophylaxis against hemophilia (Duesberg, P.H., 1992, op. cit.).
Since a clinical definition is used in Africa, statistics from this
continent are not biased against HIV-free AIDS. For example, 2215 out of
4383 (50.0%) African AIDS patients from Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Lusaka, Zambia,
and Kinshasa, Zaire, were HIV-antibody negative (Table 1, ref. 70, 71).
Another study using antibody tests and supplementary PCR tests for HIV
reports 135 (59%) HIV-free AIDS patients from Ghana out of 227 suffering
from weight loss, diarrhea, chronic fever, tuberculosis, and neurological
diseases (Table 1, ref. 72). Only 37 (30%) of a group of 122 African tuberculosis
patients were HIV-positive, according to a study published in 1993 (Table
1, ref. 73). An earlier study documents 116 HIV-negatives among 424 African
patients, and Montagnier et al. diagnosed HIV in four out of eight (Table
1, ref. 26, 69). It follows that about 50% of the African AIDS cases, or
65,000 of the 129,000 diagnosed by 1992 (Duesberg, P.H., 1992, op. cit.),
may be HIV-free and thus not caused by HIV.
Instead of considering the potential usefulness of HIV-free AIDS cases
in the search for the cause of AIDS, the CDC and the NIH's director for
AIDS hid in 1992 the then rapidly growing numbers of HIV-free AIDS cases
(Duesberg, P.H., 1992, op. cit.) under a new name, "idiopathic CD4
lymphocytopenia" or ICL. Indeed, the new name has sent HIV-free AIDS
cases into obscurity. But efforts to set apart HIV-free from HIV-positive
AIDS cases by the new term are not based on clinical or scientific arguments.
According to an editorial by Anthony Fauci, HIV-free AIDS or ICL cases
are unlike the HIV-positive cases because (1) "Given the heterogeneity
of the [ICL] syndrome, it is highly likely that there is no common cause,"
and because (2)"Approximately one-third of the patients are women,
as compared with 11% among those with HIV...[in America]" (Fauci,
A., 1993, New Eng. J. Med. 328, 429-431). Yet proponents of the HIV hypothesis,
including Fauci, insist that HIV is the common cause of the more than 25
heterogeneous AIDS diseases and that HIV causes African AIDS, although
about 50% of the African patients are women (Duesberg, P.H., 1992, op.
cit.).
In view of the above, I submit that the natural coincidence between
HIV and AIDS in America and Europe remains unknown, and is certainly less
than perfect. Thus arguments for the etiological role of HIV in AIDS, which
assume a perfect correlation, are fundamentally flawed.*
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VIRUSMYTH HOMEPAGE