Showing posts with label Henry Bauer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry Bauer. Show all posts

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Accountability for Reckless Abuse of Academic Credentials by AIDS Deniers


Unconventional thinkers or recklessly dangerous minds?

By Jon Cartwright
6 May 2010

Aids denialism is estimated to have killed many thousands. Jon Cartwright asks if scientists should be held accountable, while overleaf Bruce Charlton defends his decision to publish the work of an Aids sceptic, which sparked a row that has led to his being sacked and his journal abandoning its raison d'etre: presenting controversial ideas for scientific debate
In late 1996, Robert C, a social worker living in New York, was diagnosed as HIV-positive. At first he followed his doctor's advice and collected his prescription antiretrovirals, which stall the disease's progression. But he never took the drugs. Instead, encouraged by a series of articles in the US magazine Spin, he did nothing.

For a few years, everything was fine. Then, in February 2003, Robert spotted what looked like a blood blister on the back of his calf. That, he would later discover, was Kaposi's sarcoma, a cancer known to be triggered by Aids. Soon thereafter, he noticed that his tongue was growing patches of white fur. That would turn out to be hairy leukoplakia, an infection also strongly linked with Aids. By May that year, he had contracted Aids-related pneumonia, forcing him to revisit a surgery. But the doctor unknowingly prescribed treatment for common pneumonia: Robert refused to admit that he had HIV.
Only in January 2004, having attempted suicide to escape a nervous breakdown, did Robert finally make it into hospital and receive the drugs that would save him from death. "I still have these moments when I have to remind myself that I'm not in that world any longer," he says now, clear of Aids for almost six years.
Robert is one of many who, in the wake of a traumatic diagnosis, have succumbed to the belief that HIV does not cause Aids. It is an idea circulated by so-called Aids denialists, who claim - contrary to the overwhelming scientific evidence - that HIV is harmless, or doesn't exist, and that the true causes of Aids are either certain "lifestyles" or antiretrovirals (ARVs) themselves. A recent survey of gay and bisexual men in four US cities found that 45 per cent think that HIV does not cause Aids, and more than 50 per cent believe that HIV drugs do more harm than good. In South Africa, policies stemming from Aids denialism led to an estimated 340,000 deaths. The shocking toll is prompting many scientists and activists to ask: who should be held accountable?
The origin of Aids denialism lies with one man. Peter Duesberg has spent the whole of his academic career at the University of California, Berkeley. In the 1970s he performed groundbreaking work that helped show how mutated genes cause cancer, an insight that earned him a well-deserved international reputation. Yet in the early 1980s, something changed. Duesberg attempted to refute his own theories, claiming that it was not mutated genes but rather environmental toxins that are cancer's true cause. He dismissed the studies of other researchers who had furthered his original work. Then, in 1987, he published a paper that extended his new train of thought to Aids.
By that time, scientists were already forming a clear idea of how HIV causes Aids. HIV enters into crucial cells in the immune system, integrates with the DNA and replicates itself. The process destroys the cells, gradually weakening the immune system to a point classified as Aids, when the body is left undefended against all manner of potentially fatal infections. In his paper, however, Duesberg claimed, as he did for cancer, that Aids is caused by environmental toxins, while HIV is a mere "passenger" virus.
Initially many scientists were open to Duesberg's ideas. But as evidence linking HIV to Aids mounted - crucially the observation that ARVs brought Aids sufferers who were on the brink of death back to life - the vast majority concluded that the debate was over. Nonetheless, Duesberg persisted with his arguments, and in doing so attracted a cabal of supporters, from Australia's Perth Group of denialists to those behind the website virusmyth.com. "On a daily basis people are listening to them because they are saying what people want to hear - that HIV doesn't cause Aids," says Seth Kalichman, a clinical psychologist at the University of Connecticut and editor of the journal Aids and Behavior.
In 1999, denialism secured its highest-profile advocate: Thabo Mbeki, who was then president of South Africa. Having studied denialist literature, Mbeki decided that the consensus on Aids sounded too much like a "biblical absolute truth" that couldn't be questioned. The following year he set up a panel of advisers, nearly half of whom were Aids denialists, including Duesberg. The resultant health policies cut funding for clinics distributing ARVs, withheld donor medication and blocked international aid grants. Meanwhile, Mbeki's health minister, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, promoted the use of alternative Aids remedies, such as beetroot and garlic.
All this might not have been so devastating had South Africa not been in the throes of an Aids epidemic. Among pregnant women attending clinics, positive tests for HIV rose from almost nothing in 1990 to about a quarter in 2000. South Africa's population needed help, but little came. In 2007, Nicoli Nattrass, an economist and director of the Aids and Society Research Unit at the University of Cape Town, estimated that, between 1999 and 2007, Mbeki's Aids denialist policies led to more than 340,000 premature deaths. Later, scientists Max Essex, Pride Chigwedere and other colleagues at the Harvard School of Public Health arrived at a similar figure.
"I don't think it's hyperbole to say the (Mbeki regime's) Aids policies do not fall short of a crime against humanity," says Kalichman. "The science behind these medications was irrefutable, and yet they chose to buy into pseudoscience and withhold life-prolonging, if not life-saving, medications from the population. I just don't think there's any question that it should be looked into and investigated."
Kalichman isn't the only one demanding accountability. Over the past few years, there have been escalating calls for an inquiry that will give justice to bereaved families and help prevent a similar catastrophe recurring. Chigwedere and Essex, for example, suggest that the case could be taken on by the International Criminal Court. Salim Abdool Karim, an Aids epidemiologist at Columbia University and a former member of Mbeki's Aids advisory panel, thinks South Africa needs a "truth commission" - similar to the one that investigated perpetrators of apartheid. Others, such as Malegapuru Makgoba, who was head of South Africa's Medical Research Council during Mbeki's rule, have called the former leader's policies tantamount to genocide.
"There needs to be some sort of accounting," says Nathan Geffen, director of communications at the Treatment Action Campaign, which fights for the rights of HIV and Aids sufferers. "I'm not talking of some sort of mass trial and sending them all off to jail. I'm just talking about a public acknowledgement that this was wrong, and that these are the people who are responsible for it being wrong."
Most scientists and activists admit that the chances of a trial are low. And even if one were possible, there is concern that such public exposure of Aids denialists would give more publicity to their cause and, ultimately, lead to more deaths. This is the view taken by Nattrass, who also thinks Mbeki would fall back on the time-tested defence that he did what he believed was right.
In fairness, there was a reason to have faint doubts about HIV treatment in the early days of Mbeki's rule. In 2000, after Mbeki had formed his advisory panel and just days before an international Aids conference in Durban, more than 5,000 scientists and physicians signed the "Durban Declaration", affirming that HIV is "unequivocally" the cause of Aids. Although the declaration emphasised the general efficacy of ARVs, some individual cases had raised questions about their reliability on mass rollout. In 2002, for example, Sarah Hlalele, a South African HIV patient and activist from a settlement background, died from "lactic acidosis", a side-effect of her drugs combination. Today doctors know enough about mixing ARVs not to make the same mistake, but at the time her death terrified the medical community. Could it have somehow resulted from her poor background?
"We just didn't know," says Edwin Cameron, a justice of the South African Constitutional Court, who is openly HIV positive. Cameron believes that Mbeki played on cases such as Hlalele's to enforce his own "intellectual hubris"; indeed, he once compared the former president's Aids denialism to Holocaust denialism. Yet he thinks that any trial would be futile because of the uncertainties over ARVs that existed during Mbeki's tenure and the fact that others in Mbeki's government went along with his views (although they have since renounced them). "Mbeki was wrong, but propositions we had established then weren't as incontestably established as they are now ... So I think these calls (for genocide charges or criminal trials) are misguided, and I think they're a sideshow, and I don't support them."
Regardless of the culpability of politicians, the question remains whether scientists themselves should be allowed to promote views that go wildly against the mainstream consensus. The history of science is littered with offbeat ideas that were ridiculed by the scientific communities of the time. Most of these ideas missed the textbooks and went straight into the waste-paper basket, but a few - continental drift, the germ basis of disease or the Earth's orbit around the Sun, for instance - ultimately proved to be worth more than the paper they were written on. In science, many would argue, freedom of expression is too important to throw away.
Such an issue is engulfing the Elsevier journal Medical Hypotheses. Last year the journal, which is not peer reviewed, published a paper by Duesberg and others claiming that the South African Aids death-toll estimates were inflated, while reiterating the argument that there is "no proof that HIV causes Aids". That prompted several Aids scientists to complain to Elsevier, which responded by retracting the paper and asking the journal's editor, Bruce Charlton, to implement a system of peer review. Having refused to change the editorial policy, Charlton faces the sack (see right).
There are people who would like the journal to keep its current format and continue accepting controversial papers, but for Aids scientists, Duesberg's paper was a step too far. Although it was deleted from both the journal's website and the Medline database, its existence elsewhere on the internet drove Chigwedere and Essex to publish a peer-reviewed rebuttal earlier this year in AIDS and Behavior, lest any readers be "hoodwinked" into thinking there was genuine debate about the causes of Aids.
Duesberg believes he is being "censored", although he has found other outlets. In 1991, he helped form "The Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the HIV/Aids Hypothesis" - now called Rethinking Aids, or simply The Group - to publicise denialist information. Backed by his Berkeley credentials, he regularly promotes his views in media articles and films. Meanwhile, his closest collaborator, David Rasnick, tells "anyone who asks" that "HIV drugs do more harm than good".
Robert C was one of those who asked. In 1997, shortly after he was diagnosed as HIV-positive, he wrote to Duesberg. In reply, he received from Rasnick a letter on Berkeley-letterhead paper reassuring him that "the extraordinarily harmless virus HIV does not cause Aids" and that "the vast majority of HIV-positive people ... are perfectly healthy". It went on to say that HIV drugs "are probably doing nothing to improve health directly". Eight years later, after Robert had become seriously ill without taking medication, he wrote to Duesberg again. This time he received no response. Neither Rasnick nor Duesberg responded to questions from Times Higher Education about the potential consequences of promoting views that contradict the medical consensus.
"Is academic freedom such a precious concept that scientists can hide behind it while betraying the public so blatantly?" asked John Moore, an Aids scientist at Cornell University, on a South African health news website last year. Moore suggested that universities could put in place a "post-tenure review" system to ensure that their researchers act within accepted bounds of scientific practice. "When the facts are so solidly against views that kill people, there must be a price to pay," he added.
Now it seems Duesberg may have to pay that price since it emerged last month that his withdrawn paper has led to an investigation at Berkeley for misconduct. Yet for many in the field, chasing fellow scientists comes second to dealing with the Aids pandemic. Alan Whiteside, director of health economics and HIV/Aids research at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and another former member of Mbeki's advisory panel, says he would like to see denialist scientists, activists and governments held to account. But he also points to neighbouring Swaziland, which is widely reported to have the world's greatest HIV infection rate and a life expectancy of just 45 years. "I'm facing a crisis ... I've got to deal with that," he says. "It's more a luxury to hold people accountable."

Jon Cartwright is a freelance journalist based in Bristol.
WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Bruce Charlton explains why he published a paper by 'perhaps the world's most hated scientist' and the importance of airing radical ideas
On 11 May, Elsevier, the multinational academic publisher, will sack me from my position as editor of Medical Hypotheses. This affair has attracted international coverage in major journals such as Nature, Science and the British Medical Journal.
How did it come to this? Last year I published two papers on Aids that led to a complaint sent to Elsevier.
This was not unexpected. Medical Hypotheses was established with the express intent of allowing ideas outside the mainstream to be aired so that they could be debated openly. Its policy had not changed since its founding more than three decades ago, and it remained unaltered under my editorship, which began in 2003.
Nevertheless, managers at Elsevier sided with those who made the complaints and againstMedical Hypotheses. Glen P. Campbell, a senior vice-president at Elsevier, started a managerial process that immediately withdrew the two papers - without consulting me and without gaining editorial consent. After deliberating in private, the management at Elsevier informed me of plans to make Medical Hypotheses into an orthodox, peer-reviewed and censored journal. When I declined to implement the new policy, Elsevier gave notice to kick me out before my contract expired and without compensation.
One of the papers, by Marco Ruggiero's group at the University of Florence, (doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.06.002) teased the Italian health ministry that its policies made it seem as if the department did not believe that HIV was the cause of Aids. The other paper, by Peter Duesberg's group at University of California, Berkeley (doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.06.024), argued that HIV was not a sufficient cause of Aids.
The Ruggiero paper seems to have been an innocent bystander that was misunderstood both by those who made a complaint and by Elsevier. The real controversy focused on Duesberg's paper.
Why did I publish a paper by Duesberg - perhaps the world's most hated scientist?
Peter Duesberg is a brilliant and highly knowledgeable scientist with a track record of exceptional achievement that includes election to the US National Academy of Sciences. However, his unyielding opposition to the prevailing theory that HIV is a sufficient cause of Aids has made Duesberg an international hate figure, and his glittering career has been pretty much ruined.
I published Duesberg's paper because to do so was clearly in line with the long-term goals, practice and the explicitly stated scope and aims of Medical Hypotheses. We have published many, many such controversial and dissenting papers over the past 35 years. Duesberg is obviously a competent scientist, he is obviously the victim of an orchestrated campaign of intimidation and exclusion, and I interpret his sacrifice of status to principle as prima facie evidence of his sincerity. If I had rejected this paper for fear of the consequences, I would have been betraying the basic ethos of the journal.
Medical Hypotheses was founded 35 years ago by David Horrobin with the purpose of disseminating ideas, theories and hypotheses relating to biomedicine, and of doing so on the basis of editorial review instead of peer review. Horrobin argued that peer review intrinsically tended to exclude radical and revolutionary ideas, and that alternatives were needed. He chose me as his editorial successor because I shared these views.
Both Horrobin and I agreed that the only correct scientific way to deal with dissent was to publish it so that it could be debated, confirmed or refuted in an open and scientific forum. The alternative - suppressing scientific dissent by preventing publication using behind-the-scenes and anonymous procedures - we would both regard as extremely dangerous because it is wide open to serious abuse and manipulation by powerful interest groups.
Did I know that the Duesberg paper would be controversial?
Yes. I knew that Duesberg was being kept out of the mainstream scientific literature, and that breaching this conspiracy would annoy those who had succeeded in excluding him for so long.
When I published the Duesberg article, I envisaged it meeting one of two possible fates.
In the first scenario, the paper would be shunned or simply ignored - dropped down the memory hole. This is what has usually happened in the past when a famous scientist published ideas that their colleagues regarded as misguided or crazy. Linus Pauling (1901-94) was a Nobel prizewinner and one of the most important chemists in history. Yet his views on the medical benefits of vitamin C were regarded as wrong. He was allowed to publish them, but (rightly or wrongly) they were generally ignored in mainstream science.
In the other scenario, Duesberg's paper would attract robust criticism and (apparent) refutation. This happened with Fred Hoyle (1915-2001), a Fellow of the Royal Society whose work on the "steady state" theory of the Universe made him one of the most important cosmologists of the late 20th century. But his views on the origins of life on Earth and the Archaeopteryx fossil were generally regarded as eccentric. Hoyle's ideas were published, attracted much criticism, and were (probably) refuted.
So I expected that Duesberg's paper either would be ignored or would trigger letters and other papers countering the ideas and evidence presented. Medical Hypotheses would have published these counter-arguments, then provided space for Duesberg to respond to the criticisms and later allowed critics to reply to Duesberg's defence. That is, after all, how real science is supposed to work.
What I did not expect was that editors and scientists would be bypassed altogether, and that the matter would be settled by the senior managers of a multinational publishing corporation in consultation with pressure-group activists. Certainly, that would never have happened 25 years ago, when I began research in science.
The success of Medical Hypotheses
Nor did I not expect that I would be sacked, the journal destroyed and plans made to replace it with an impostor of the same name. I did not expect this because I had been doing a good job andMedical Hypotheses was a successful journal.
Elsevier managers in the UK had frequently commended my work, I got a good salary for my work as editor, and I was twice awarded substantial performance-related pay rises. The journal was expanded in size by 50 per cent under my editorship, and a spin-off journal, Bioscience Hypotheses (edited by William Bains), was launched in 2008 on the same principles of editorial review and a radical agenda.
The success of Medical Hypotheses is evidenced by its impact factor (average citations per paper), which under my editorship rose from about 0.6 to 1.4 - an above-average figure for biomedical journals. Download usage was also exceptionally high with considerably more than 1,000 online readers per day (or about half a million papers downloaded per year). This level of internet usage is equivalent to that of a leading title such as Journal of Theoretical Biology.
But Medical Hypotheses was also famous for publishing some rather "eccentric" papers, which were chosen for their tendency to provoke thought, trigger discussion or amuse in a potentially stimulating way. Papers such as Georg Steinhauser's recent analysis of belly-button fluff have polarised opinion and also helped make Medical Hypotheses a cult favourite among people such as Marc Abrahams, the founder of the IgNobel Prizes. But they have also made it the subject of loathing and ridicule among those who demand that science and the bizarre be kept strictly demarcated (to prevent "misunderstanding").
It is hard to measure exactly the influence of a journal, but some recent papers stand out as having had an impact. A report by Lola Cuddy and Jacalyn Duffin discussed the fascinating implications of an old lady with severe Alzheimer's disease who could still recognise tunes such asOh, What a Beautiful Mornin'. This paper, which was discussed by Oliver Sacks in his bookMusicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain, seems to have helped spark a renewed interest in music in relation to brain disease.
The paper "A tale of two cannabinoids" by E. Russo and G.W. Guy suggested that a combination of marijuana products tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) would be valuable painkillers. This idea has since been widely discussed in the scientific literature.
And in 2005, Eric Altschuler published in Medical Hypotheses a letter outlining his idea that survivors of the 1918 flu epidemic might even now retain immunity to the old virus. A few 1918 flu survivors were found who still had antibodies, and cells from those people were cloned to create an antiserum that protected experimental mice against the flu virus. The work was eventually published in Nature and received wide coverage in the US media.
What is my own position on the cause of Aids?
As an editor of a radical journal, my position was resolutely agnostic - in other words, I was not pursuing an agenda. I would publish papers presenting both sides of the debate. Most of the papers I published on Aids were orthodox ideas relating to HIV as the main cause. However, as well as Duesberg's article, I published some other papers challenging the HIV causal theory and proposing different mechanisms, such as work by Lawrence Broxmeyer arguing that some Aids patients actually have tuberculosis.
As for my personal opinions on the cause of Aids, these are irrelevant to real science because the subject is too far away from my core expertise and I do not work in that area. It is clear that Duesberg understands far more about HIV than I do, and more than at least 99 per cent of his critics do. Therefore, the opinions of most of Duesberg's critics, no matter how vehement, are just as irrelevant to real science as are mine.
But for me to collude with prohibiting Duesberg from publishing, I would have needed to be 100 per cent sure that Duesberg was 100 per cent wrong. Because even if he is mostly wrong, it is possible that someone of his ability may be seeing some kind of problem with the current consensus about Aids that other people of lesser ability (that is, most of us) are missing.
And if Duesberg may be even partially correct, it is extremely dangerous that the proper scientific process has been so ruthlessly distorted and subverted simply to exclude his ideas from the official scientific literature.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Peter Duesberg and the AIDS Genocide in South Africa

  















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].


Nevertheless, Duesberg's article lives on in cyberspace and Duesberg continues to seek its publication. It is important to show yet again that Peter Duesberg is wrong on HIV/AIDS. Below is an excerpt from a new article by Pride Chigwedere and Max Essex published in the journal AIDS and Behavior. 


DISCLOSURE ALERT: I am the Editor of AIDS and Behavior and this paper was peer-reviewed. The full article is available FREE  online


AIDS Denialism and Public Health Practice
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.



Serological studies then suggested that the causative agent was likely to be a retrovirus, and this was confirmed by isolation and culture of the retrovirus from infected patients. Diagnostic assays were developed and much larger studies were then possible to identify HIV-infected persons using the presence of HIV antibodies, antigens, viral nucleic acids and virus, and to compare them to uninfected persons in longitudinal studies to learn the virology, immunology, pathology, and clinical and population features of the disease. HIV meets several standards of epidemiologic causality. 


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 difficulty in fulfilling the postulates was because HIV does not cause disease in animals other than humans and it is unethical to infect healthy persons with HIV just to satisfy Koch’s guidelines. However, the postulates were satisfied when the HIV virus was isolated from AIDS patients, cultured in vitro, and upon accidental inoculation into previously uninfected lab workers who subsequently developed AIDS, the exact laboratory HIV clone was reisolated from the patients. Using a causal model developed for chronic disease, HIV satisfies all of Sir Bradford Hill’s guidelines for assessing causality: numerous studies comparing infected and non-infected persons have shown that AIDS develops only in those infected with HIV (very strong association, consistency and specificity); follow-up cohorts have shown that the time relationship is that HIV infection always precedes AIDS (temporality); higher level of virus as measured by viral load correlates with and predicts severity of disease (biological gradient) ;treatment that suppresses virus leads to clinical improvement (experiment); there is an almost unique pathophysiological mechanism of how HIV leads to AIDS through the loss of CD4 lymphocytes (specificity and plausibility; and numerous studies on HIV-1,HIV-2, SIV, SHIV and other viruses satisfy the coherence and analogy guidelines.

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.



However, when lab workers accidentally inoculated themselves with the virus and satisfied the postulates, Duesberg refused to accept the data and now conveniently does not discuss the postulates. Similarly, early on, Duesberg agreed that hemophiliacs were the best group to test whether HIV causes AIDS because most of them did not have the drug use exposures that Duesberg considered causes, and both HIV-positive and HIV-negative hemophiliacs had received transfusions, hence ‘‘foreign-protein contaminants.’’

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.



While the other points raised by Duesberg pertain to pathogenesis and not causation, most of the mechanisms are understood today. Thus, molecular techniques were developed and it became possible to isolate and quantify free virus in plasma; the dynamics between virus and CD4 cells and how this relates to disease progression were unraveled; highly effective medications that work by suppressing virus were developed and are now in widespread use; and opportunistic infections similar to those in the US were reported from Africa and Asia. Duesberg has moved on from those arguments.

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.



In his earlier writings, he accepted that there is statistical association between HIV and AIDS (although he argued this was insufficient for causation) and even considered the HIV-antibody test as useful surrogate to identify patients at risk of AIDS; today, he denies that and argues that HIV is a passenger virus with no relationship whatsoever to AIDS. In the same contradictory way, Duesberg has argued that HIV is not the cause of AIDS because ‘‘in most individuals suffering from AIDS, no virus particles can be found anywhere in the body’’; yet at about the same time that he published this, he was involved in a disagreement with other AIDS denialists who had challenged the very existence of HIV where he defended that ‘‘HIV has been isolated by the most rigorous method science has to offer.’’ Duesberg clings to the early argument that AIDS is caused by use of recreational drugs, but as explained above, this hypothesis was discarded when AIDS was seen in patients that had never used drugs including hemophiliacs, transfusion recipients, babies, and some African populations.


For hemophiliacs, he suggests that ‘‘foreign-protein contamination’’ through blood products is the cause, yet does not explain how AIDS from transfusion has virtually been eliminated just by incorporating the HIV test into blood screening. The strangest cause he proposes is that AIDS is caused by AZT and other antiretroviral drugs, even though AZT was only used after 1987 and used primarily on persons already with AIDS rather than healthy persons. To this, Duesberg replies that there was no AIDS in persons other than illicit drug users before 1987.In babies, he moves from arguing that there is no AIDS in babies and HIV cannot cause AIDS in babies (as it would otherwise kill itself together with its host), arguing that there is immunosuppression in babies but it is different and characterized by B cell deficiency, then that babies with AIDS are born to drug-addicted mothers.


Nevertheless, there are data showing that pediatric AIDS is real and has killed over 250,000 children per year since 1998, that it has the same immunological profile of CD4 deficiency as in adults, and that HIV-negative babies born to drug addicts do not get AIDS. What of Africa, the worst affected continent, which has comparatively much less recreational drug use and until this decade did not have ARVs in large supply? Duesberg suggests that the cause is ‘‘protein malnutrition, poor sanitation and subsequent parasitic infections.’’

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.



In short, any explanation other than that HIV causes AIDS seems better to Duesberg—he therefore moves from the claim that AIDS does not exist to a multiplicity of causes even if it means creating a different cause for different geographies, different time periods, and different demographic groups, and without producing a shred of evidence. This is what is called denialism— ‘‘the rejection of objective reality to sustain a flawed,
hurtful, and ultimately dangerous belief system’’.

Are ARVs Effective in PMTCT and AIDS Treatment?


Estimating the human cost of not using ARVs in South Africa rests on the efficacy of ARVs when used for PMTCT and AIDS treatment. Mbeki entered the AIDS debate by questioning whether AZT was safe and useful for pregnant women, and Duesberg argues this position for all ARVs.

There are two observations to make from the way Duesberg argues the case. First, he discusses how and when AZT was first discovered and its mechanism of action inhibiting DNA synthesis, then cites some anecdotal cases, and concludes that all ARV drugs are toxic and not useful. Mechanisms of action are interesting to scientists but this is the wrong evidence to evaluate for efficacy. If one were to ask how best to treat hypertension, for example, the answer does not come from the interesting neurobiology of the hypothalamic blood pressure control centers, the crystal structure of angiotensin, or how Captopril was initially discovered.


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.



After deciding on the standard of proof—which is the clinical trial—the second step is to agree on how to assess the results from many such trials done in different countries and populations. Duesberg’s method is narration, where he ignores the data he dislikes, cherry-picks the statements he likes from different publications, and selectively interprets them to support his position, disregarding even the main conclusions of the studies.
Narrative reviews, while very common and perhaps relatively less demanding to perform, have the drawback that it may be unclear whether all the relevant evidence has been used or the reviewer selected studies that support a desired conclusion, and whether the apportionment of weight to studies was based on objective criteria such as sample size. The relevant standard here is a meta-analysis, that is, a systematic review with statistical synthesis of all relevant available data. When a meta-analysis is performed well, there is an a priori protocol specifying the question asked, the databases to be searched for publications, justifiable inclusion and exclusion criteria, the data to be extracted from studies, the quality assessment score to be used for each study, and models for statistical analysis.


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.

To quote an example from our work, we recently published ‘‘Efficacy of Antiretroviral Drugs in Reducing Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV in Africa: A Meta-Analysis of Published Clinical Trials.’’ The question asked was how efficacious have ARVs been in PMTCT in Africa, first to generate an efficacy estimate directly relevant for policies on the continent that is worst affected by HIV/AIDS, and second, to pre-empt the debate on what is feasible in Africa (due to drug compliance, C-section rates, breastfeeding, late antenatal presentation, etc.) by considering only studies performed in Africa. The key result of this meta-analysis is that ARVs reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV from 21% (combined placebo estimate) to 10.6% (combined ARVs estimate) at 4–6 weeks after birth. From all the studies that reported toxicity, ARV regimens for PMTCT are well tolerated by both the mothers and babies.

The quantity of this evidence is 10 clinical trials with a combined sample size of over 7,000 HIV-infected pregnant women, and over 800 transmission endpoints. The type of evidence is high grade, that is, randomized clinical trials rather than observational, cross-sectional, or case reports. The Jadad quality of the individual clinical trials is high.
The efficacy of using ARVs versus placebo is 50%. Using the US Institute of Medicine categories of certainty in assessing evidence, the evidence establishes that ARVs are efficacious in reducing MTCT in Africa, and the evidence favors rejection of the hypothesis that ARVs, in the doses used, are toxic to the mothers or babies. Example diagrams are shown in the published paper [click here]



Contrary to what Duesberg suggests, there are unanimous data (all trials conducted in Africa published by December 2006) to demonstrate the usefulness of ARVs in PMTCT in Africa, and other groups have arrived at the same conclusions for ARV use in PMTCT generally.

Likewise, extensive clinical trials data demonstrate the efficacy of ARV drug combinations in treating AIDS. The results from use of drugs in combination were so dramatic that the term ‘‘HAART,’’ for Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy, was coined. Many systematic reviews have been conducted and updated by the Cochrane Collaboration and other groups, and the data are unanimous regarding efficacy. In addition, data are now available from the use of ARVs at the program level in African countries and these support the efficacy observed in clinical trials. Several studies have systematically reviewed the data just for developing countries and Africa, and others compared low and high-income countries.


In short, if Duesberg wishes to demonstrate that certain ARVs are no better or worse than placebo or other treatments, he has to conduct a meta-analysis that considers all available evidence, rather than his approach of discussing the molecular biology of DNA chain termination and somehow inferring that ARVs are not beneficial.




Moreover, for Duesberg to totally discredit the paper on the human cost of not using ARVs, he has to argue that all ARVs are totally ineffective when used for AIDS treatment and PMTCT because if some ARVs are even marginally effective, then it means that some South Africans could have benefited, however, small the benefit, had Mbeki not obstructed drug use.



Population Growth and AIDS Deaths



The third of Duesberg and colleagues’ arguments is that there is no evidence of large-scale deaths in South Africa, and therefore whatever policies Mbeki implemented, they did not lead to deaths. To support this, they present two arguments: one, that the population of South Africa increased over the last 30 years, and two, the statistics of reported AIDS deaths in South Africa. Regarding the first argument, it is true that the population of South Africa increased over the last 30 years. The population in a country is determined by the balance between the number of live births, the total number of deaths, and net migration. Without doing an analysis of the above determinants, it not possible to use such aggregate population trend data to infer that the number of AIDS deaths was small. If this reasoning is sound, then it should be applicable to other countries and diseases as well. Is it logical to infer that AIDS deaths are few in any country that has increased its population over the last three decades?


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.




Not only was he lending his ear to discredited scientists, but AIDS denialism was crossing into national health policy through a head of government. Participants at the 2000 International AIDS Conference in Durban (SA), news outlets, scientific journals, and the public were outraged and some went as far as saying that South Africa was tripping into anarchy, descending into an abyss. South Africa did descend into that abyss. Mbeki withdrew support from clinics that had started using ARVs, restricted use of donated ARVs, obstructed Global Fund grants, and generally delayed implementing a national ARV program. Two independent studies have estimated that Mbeki’s policies led to at least 330,000 premature deaths. When AIDS denialism infiltrates public health practice, the consequences are tragic.


The second implication follows directly from the first and concerns accountability. Mbeki implemented negligent policies that led to the premature death of hundreds of thousands. His reasons, as stated by himself and health minister Tshabalala-Msimang, were that he questioned whether HIV causes AIDS and whether ARVs are safe, and neither ever publicly backed down from this thinking. The science behind Mbeki was Duesberg and other denialists.


Duesberg is still arguing for AIDS denialism and defending Mbeki and the policies that led to more than 330,000 deaths. By any reasonable standard, this requires some form of accountability.


Seth Kalichman has likened the AIDS denialists to the Holocaust deniers and Edwin Cameron likened letting AIDS patients die without medications to those who silently enabled the evils of Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa to go unchecked.


John Moore and Nathan Geffen have called for AIDS denialists to be put on trial and Mark Wainberg has argued that denialists should be charged with public endangerment and ‘‘people like Peter Duesberg belong in jail.’’


Zachie Achmat has called for a commission of enquiry such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that was tasked with handling the apartheid era crimes. For how are South Africans ever going to trust their health system again?


How can a modern government be penetrated by denialists to the extent of implementing policies that kill hundreds of thousands?


William Makgoba suggested that impeding AIDS treatment was collaborating in committing genocide, and
Wycliffe Muga has asked whether Mbeki’s killing of 330,000 by obstructing life-saving medications is much different from Sudan’s President al Bashir’s killing a similar number in Darfur through obstructing humanitarian aid and militias. Is this not a crime against humanity?


Does the International Criminal Court not have a role, for it was established to handle those cases where national courts may be unable or unwilling to prosecute? 


Whatever the most appropriate avenue is, what seems apparent is the need for accountability.


The third implication somewhat generalizes the argument. AIDS denialists are dangerous to the general population; many have been persuaded into risky behaviors, ineffective alternative remedies, and other harmful actions, although there is no easy way of evaluating how many. Similarly, denialists can impact public or national health policy and South Africa is one extremely tragic case.


However, denialists seem ineffective against physicians as a group. The reason is that if an AIDS patient goes to a physician, and the physician decides not to treat, the physician is held for malpractice. The medical profession is practiced only by those who have earned defined credentials. The standards of practice are generally known and deviant practitioners are disciplined by the medical societies and deregistered by states.
Moreover, the law of torts offers patients a private right of redress against negligent doctors. The above seem absent in public and global health. The practitioners are ill defined and there are no laws restricting practice to persons with specified credentials. The concept of standards of practice is not well developed, and there are no bodies tasked with self-regulation and discipline.


The concept of public health malpractice has not yet been developed. Thus, at a general level, AIDS denialism in South Africa has also exposed the deficiencies of public health practice—it is open to unqualified practitioners, negligent policies go unchecked, and the consequences are tragic. How to rectify this is beyond the scope of this paper; here it suffices to point out the deficiencies of public health in terms of standards, practitioners, and accountability, as exposed by the South Africa example.


Last, Duesberg was able to publish his paper (which was later withdrawn) only because it was not reviewed by peers knowledgeable on the subject. Denialist writings require close scrutiny and peer review before being published in scientific journals, especially when they have the potential to impact public health practice.
When AIDS denialism enters public health practice, the consequences are tragic. The implications start in honest science but extend to the need for accountability and, perhaps, public health reform.


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