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AIDS
Epidemiology: Inconsistencies with Human Immunodeficiency Virus
and with Infectious Disease By Peter H.
Duesberg
Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 88, pp. 1575-1579, February 1991
Contributed by Peter H. Duesberg, October 11, 1990.
Abstract
The newly
defined syndrome AIDS includes 25 unrelated parasitic, neoplastic,
and noninfectious indicator diseases. Based on epidemiological
correlations, the syndrome is thought to be due to a new, sexually
or parenterally transmitted retrovirus termed human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). The following epidemiological data conflict with this
hypothesis. (i) Noncorrelations exist between HIV and AIDS; for
example, the AIDS risks of infected subjects vary >10-fold with
their gender or country. Abnormal health risks that are never
controlled as independent AIDS causes by AIDS statistics, such as
drug addiction and hemophilia, correlate directly with an abnormal
incidence of AIDS diseases. Above all, the AIDS diseases occur in
all risk groups in the absence of HIV. (ii) American AIDS is
incompatible with infectious disease, because it is almost
exclusively restricted to males (91%), because if it occurs, then
only on average 10 years after transfusion of HIV, because specific
AIDS diseases are not transmissible among different risk groups, and
because unlike a new infectious disease, AIDS has not spread
exponentially since the AIDS test was established and AIDS received
its current definition in 1987. (iii) Epidemiological evidence
indicates that HIV is a long-established, perinatally transmitted
retrovirus. HIV acts as a marker for American AIDS risks, because it
is rare and not transmissible by horizontal contacts other than
frequent transfusions, intravenous drugs, and repeated or
promiscuous sex. It is concluded that American AIDS is not
infectious, and suggested that unidentified, mostly noninfectious
pathogens cause AIDS. Introduction
Epidemiology is
like a bikini: what is revealed is interesting; what is concealed is
crucial.
AIDS is a newly
defined syndrome of 25 old parasitic, neoplastic, and noninfectious
diseases, including in the United States 53% pneumonia, 19% wasting
disease, candidiasis, 11% Kaposi sarcoma, 6% dementia, 3% lymphoma,
and 2% tuberculosis (1). These unrelated diseases are grouped
together because they are all thought to be indicators of an
acquired immunodeficiency (2). In America AIDS is almost completely
restricted (91%) to males (1). About 90% of all AIDS patients are
20- to 40-year-olds, 30% are intravenous drug users and their
children, 60% are male homosexuals and some heterosexuals who
frequently use oral psychoactive drugs (3-7), and 7% are
hemophiliacs and other recipients of transfusions (1).
As of 1982, the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) considered AIDS infectious because
it appeared to be transmitted among intravenous drug users and
homosexuals by sexual contact or by contaminated blood (8). Among
infectious agents, cytomegalovirus and various bacteria were
proposed as causes of AIDS (6, 8, 10). In 1983 Montagnier and
coworkers (11) suggested lymphadenopathy-associated virus [now
termed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)] and Gallo et al. (12)
human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV) as causes of AIDS. However,
psychoactive drugs, like aphrodisiac nitrite inhalants ("poppers"),
were also proposed as causes for Kaposi sarcoma and pneumonia in
homosexuals (3-7, 9).
In April 1984
the Secretary of Health and Human Services announced that HIV was
the cause of AIDS, and an antibody test for HIV, termed the AIDS
test, was registered as a patent by Gallo and collaborators (13-15).
This happened before even one American study on HIV had been
published (13). According to this view HIV is a lymphotropic
retrovirus that is sexually transmitted (16-20). On average 10-11
years after infection and appearance of neutralizing antibodies, HIV
is postulated to cause immunodeficiency by killing billions of T
cells (16-21). Only then, indicator diseases are said to develop
from which patients die on average within 1 year (21-26). Thus HIV
became the first virus for which a positive antibody test is
interpreted as an indicator for primary diseases that have yet to
come. Antibodies against conventional viruses typically signal
protection against disease and those against some persistent viruses
also signal a small risk of secondary disease upon virus
reactivation (27, 28). Although no retrovirus has ever been shown to
be pathogenic in humans (29), HIV is thought to be 50-100% fatal,
more than any other human virus (16-21). The novelty of AIDS is
postulated to reflect the novelty of HIV. The large variety of
indicator diseases are postulated to reflect underlying
immunodeficiency, and the almost exclusive concentration of AIDS in
20- to 40-year-olds (1) is postulated to reflect sexual or
parenteral transmission of HIV (16-20).
This virus-AIDS
hypothesis was accepted by most medical scientists, in particular
virologists, by 1986 (16-18, 30). Accordingly, the virus was named
HIV by an international committee of retrovirologists (30) and
became the only basis for the definition of AIDS: "Regardless of the
presence of other causes of immunodeficiency, in the presence of
laboratory evidence for HIV, any disease listed ... indicates a
diagnosis of AIDS" (2). AIDS is now diagnosed whenever antibody to
HIV is detectable along with any of the 25 indicator diseases, even
if no immunodeficiency or opportunistic infections are detected, as
in cases of Kaposi sarcoma, lymphoma, dementia, and wasting syndrome
(2, 18, 23-26, 31). Moreover, infection in the absence of any
clinical symptoms is now termed, and often treated as, "HIV disease"
(18). However, all efforts directed by the virus-AIDS hypothesis,
for over 2 billion dollars annually, have failed to contain or cure
AIDS (32, 33).
Since 1987 I
have challenged the virus-AIDS hypothesis because HIV is latent and
is present in only 1 out of 500 T cells during AIDS, because
retroviruses typically do not kill cells, and because AIDS appears
on average 10 years after the virus has been neutralized by
antibodies (7, 29, 34). In response to this challenge it was agreed
that the hypothesis cannot be defended in terms of orthodox
virology, based on known genetic and biochemical properties of HIV
(35-47). However, it was claimed that epidemiological evidence
supports the virus-AIDS hypothesis (35, 36, 38-41, 44-47) and that
Gallo (48), Montagnier (editorial comment in ref. 7, p. 5), and
possibly others (editorial footnote in ref. 34, p. 755) would prove
it. Here this epidemiological evidence is called into
question. Noncorrelations Between AIDS and HIV
AIDS
Risks of HIV-Infected Persons Differ 10- to 65-Fold Depending on
Their Country. If AIDS is caused by HIV, the
ratio of infected to diseased carriers should be similar in
different countries. However, in the United States about 10% (or
100,000) (1) of 1 million HIV-positives (16, 18, 49, 50) have
developed AIDS since 1985, but in Uganda only 0.8% (or 8000) of 1
million (51), and in Zaire only 0.15% (4636) (52) of 3 million
HIV-positives (34). Although AIDS surveillance by some African
countries has been questioned, surveillance by Uganda is reported as
"highly successful," providing "the highest number ... of cases ...
in Africa" (51). Since the HIV epidemics of both the United States
and Africa are said to be new and to have an African origin (17, 20,
36, 45), but the AIDS risks of infected Americans are 10- to 65-fold
higher than those of Africans, country-specific pathogens are
necessary for AIDS. Moreover, if AIDS equaled opportunistic
infections resulting from immunodeficiency, more, instead of less,
AIDS per HIV carrier would be expected in Africa than in the United
States.
AIDS
Risks Among HIV-Infected Americans Differ About 10-Fold Based on
Gender. Since 1985 the U.S. Army has tested
1.15 x 106 male and female 17- to 19-year-old recruits for
antibodies to HIV. Every year 0.03% of the males and females in this
age group were found to be HIV-positive (53). Although HIV has been
distributed equally between the sexes among 17- to 24-year-old
Americans for the last 5 years, about 10 times more AIDS cases have
occurred in males (1, 53). Ninety-five percent of these were either
intravenous drug users or homosexuals (1, 53).
Abnormal Health Risks Correlate Directly with the Incidence
of AIDS Diseases. Since 97% of the American
AIDS patients come from behavioral or clinical health-risk groups
and since the incidence of AIDS indicator diseases in risk-matched,
HIV-free control groups is never reported (1), it may be argued that
pathogens associated with abnormal lifestyles are causing AIDS (3-7,
32, 34, 54)-particularly because the diseases are risk-specific (see
below).
In response to
this, it has been pointed out that AIDS occurs outside the major
risk groups in Americans and Africans. However, to date only 3900,
or about 3%, of all American AIDS cases have come from groups
without health risk (1). These represent 25 conventional diseases
that occurred in a country of 250 million inhabitants over the last
9 years (1). To determine whether these diseases are due to HIV,
their incidence must be compared with that in the normal, HIV-free
population. However, this has not been done, because these diseases
are only reportable and recorded by the CDC as AIDS if HIV is
present (1). Thus there is no controlled epidemiological evidence
that HIV is pathogenic in the normal United States population. The
same is true for Africa. The cumulative incidence of AIDS from 1986
to 1989 in Uganda was only 8000 (0.8%) out of 1 million
HIV-positives (51), or about 0.2% annually. (Most AIDS statistics
are cumulative and thus always increasing.) Since >90% of these
cases are common African diseases like slim disease, fever,
diarrhea, and tuberculosis (34, 51) and their incidence in HIV-free
controls is not reported, it is uncertain whether HIV is pathogenic
in Africa.
Further, it has
been argued based on anecdotal cases that AIDS did not exist prior
to HIV in clinical health-risk groups such as (i)
hemophiliacs, (ii) other recipients of transfusions,
(iii) children of drug-addicted mothers, and (iv) drug
addicts (1, 18, 35, 36, 38, 44, 45, 47). However, competing causes
for AIDS diseases have not been excluded in any of these
cases.
(i)
Transfusions of blood and factor VIII and
intrinsic deficiencies associated with hemophilia, acting over the
long time periods said to be latent periods of HIV, have all been
identified as pathogenic factors for AIDS-like diseases in
hemophiliacs (55-61). To determine whether HIV or clinical
deficiencies and their treatment cause AIDS in hemophiliacs, either
controlled epidemiological studies comparing matched hemophiliacs,
with and without HIV, or epidemiological evidence that the mortality
of hemophiliacs is increased by HIV would be
necessary.
Surprisingly,
in view of the many claims that HIV causes AIDS in hemophiliacs,
there is not one controlled study that has found HIV to be a health
risk. There is also no report from any country that the mortality
rate of hemophiliacs has increased due to the infection of
hemophiliacs with HIV (59). In fact, it appears to be lower than
ever (56, 59). About 75% of the 20,000 severe hemophiliacs in the
United States are reported to be HIV-positive at least since 1980 to
1982, owing to the administration of blood or factor VIII (16, 18,
59, 61, 62). Because the administration of plasma fractions prepared
from large numbers of donors started in 1965, many hemophiliacs may
have been HIV-positive for >10 years now (56, 59). Since 50-100%
of HIV-infected persons are postulated to develop AIDS after an
average latent period of 10 years (18, 21, 34), at least half of the
15,000 HIV-positive hemophiliacs should have died from AIDS. Yet
<2% of the 15,000 HIV-positive hemophiliacs in the United States
have died with a diagnosis of AIDS in 1988 and in 1989 (1).
The low annual
incidence of AIDS-like diseases among hemophiliacs in the United
States is likely to reflect hemophilia-related morbidity and
mortality under a new name. Indeed, among American hemophiliacs
infected for an average of at least 10 years with HIV, elapsed time
as a hemophiliac stands out as the critical determinant for AIDS
diseases. The median age of hemophiliac AIDS patients is 34 years,
or 14 years higher (59) than that of their asymptomatic peers, which
is 20-22 years (16, 59).
(ii) The thesis that HIV transfusions
cause AIDS in other patients is also entirely uncontrolled (36).
Indeed, a controlled study might be difficult because 50% of
American patients (other than hemophiliacs) die within 1 year (58)
and 60% within 3 years (63) after a transfusion-long before the
average 10 years that HIV is said to require for pathogenicity have
elapsed. The pathogenic conditions that necessitated the
transfusions are obviously deadlier than the hypothetical pathogen
HIV.
(iii) About 95% of the children with
AIDS in the United States were subject to pathogenic conditions
other than the putative pathogen HIV, either drug addiction of the
mother or deficiencies of their own that required blood transfusions
(1). The remainder probably reflects normal morbidity of infants
born to healthy mothers who are perinatally (see below) or
iatrogenically infected by HIV.
(iv) A rare controlled study showed
that among 297 asymptomatic, HIV-positive intravenous drug users the
AIDS risk over 16 months was 3 times higher in those who persisted
than in those who stopped injecting drugs (95).
Since the
incidence of AIDS diseases in non-risk groups appears normal, and
since the abnormal incidence of AIDS diseases in risk groups
correlates directly with their abnormal health risks, there is no
epidemiological evidence that HIV is pathogenic. Although
longitudinal studies of selected risk groups claim, some even
without published data or references (64), that HIV-positives have
more AIDS, none of these studies have controlled the negatives for
all health risks and selection biases (18, 47, 62, 65).
AIDS
Indicator Diseases Occur Without HIV in All Risk Groups.
Tsoukas et al. (61) observed severe
immunodeficiency in 6 of 14 HIV-free and 9 of 15 HIV-positive
hemophiliacs. Ludlam et al. (60) described a group of 15
hemophiliacs who had acquired immunodeficiency before they were
infected by HIV. Others observed HIV in only 7 of 19 (55) or 10 of
19 (66) hemophiliacs who had very similar immunodeficiencies.
However, direct correlations were observed between the degree of
immunodeficiency and the amount of clotting factor consumed, in both
HIV-negatives and HIV-positives (60, 66).
A prospective
study from Canada identified immunodeficiency in 33 of 161 HIV-free
homosexual men. Nine of these became subsequently infected by HIV
(65). Further, a recent study identified initially 6 and now 12
HIV-free Kaposi sarcoma cases in male American homosexuals, some of
which occurred in the absence of immunodeficiency (67, 68). Others
recorded the occurrence of Kaposi sarcoma in AIDS risk groups long
before AIDS (57). And recently, CDC workers have postulated a Kaposi
agent other than HIV, because of the almost exclusive occurrence of
Kaposi sarcoma in homosexuals among AIDS risk groups (69). Moreover,
there is no trace of HIV even in the Kaposi sarcomas of patients in
which antibody to HIV is confirmed (34). Thus HIV is necessary
neither for immunodeficiency nor for Kaposi sarcoma in homosexuals,
although their association is perceived as the hallmark of AIDS (68,
69).
Among
intravenous drug users in New York representing a "spectrum of
HIV-related diseases," HIV was not observed in 26 of 50 pneumonia
deaths, 15 of 22 endocarditis deaths, and 5 of 16 tuberculosis
deaths (70). Likewise, no HIV was observed in 24 of 54 prisoners
with tuberculosis in New York State, of whom 47 were street-drug
users (71). Similar neurological deficiencies were recently observed
in 12 HIV-infected and 16 uninfected infants from drug-addicted
mothers (72). In a group of 21 heroin addicts, of whom only 2 were
infected by HIV, the ratio of helper to suppressor T cells was found
to decline within 13 years from a normal of 2 to <1 (73), which
is typical of AIDS (16).
Since all AIDS
indicator diseases occur in AIDS risk groups in the absence of HIV,
HIV is not a necessary cause for these diseases (except for their
diagnosis as AIDS). Current AIDS statistics probably include
additional HIV-free cases because HIV was confirmed up to 1989 in
only about 73% of all American AIDS cases, and in only 39% of the
AIDS cases from New York and 61% from California (74). Moreover,
statistics are biased in favor of HIV-positive cases because AIDS is
reportable whereas most HIV-free indicator diseases are not
(57). Inconsistencies Between AIDS and Infectious
Disease
AIDS
Diseases That Are Not Male-Specific Show a 10-Fold Preference for
Males. The distribution of conventional
sexually transmitted diseases is almost even between the sexes (75).
By contrast American AIDS occurs almost exclusively (91%) in males,
although none of the 25 AIDS diseases is male-specific (1). However,
African AIDS appears largely compatible with infectious diseases
that strike without preference for sex, risk, and age groups (17,
18, 51) and that hardly overlap with American AIDS (see
below).
Latent
Periods of 10 Years Are Not Compatible with Infectious
Disease. Viruses, retroviruses, and HIV are
immunogenic and biochemically most active within weeks or months
after infection (27, 28, 34, 76, 77). There is no precedent for an
infectious agent that causes primary diseases on average only years
after it is neutralized by antibodies (27, 28, 38, 39). Yet HIV is
claimed to cause AIDS on average 10 years after transfusion in
adults and only after 2 years in children (18, 34, 62). The
diversity of these latent periods is inconsistent with one
infectious agent, and their magnitude is characteristic for diseases
caused by chronic exposure to toxic substances.
Specific AIDS Diseases Are Not Transmissible Among Different
Risk Groups. If AIDS diseases are caused
directly by HIV or are due to HIV-induced immunodeficiencies and
available parasites, all infected subjects should have the same risk
of developing those AIDS diseases that are not associated with
group- or region-specific parasites. However, 53% of American AIDS
patients have Pneumocystis pneumonia and 13% have candidiasis
(1), whereas 90% of the African AIDS patients have slim disease,
fever, diarrhea, and tuberculosis but not pneumonia and candidiasis
(34, 51), although Pneumocystis carinii and candida are
ubiquitous in humans, including Africans (34, 78, 79). In addition,
the AIDS diseases of American children are different from those of
adults-namely, 50% pneumonia, 16% wasting disease, 12% dementia, and
20% bacterial infections, which are exclusively diagnosed in
children (1). Further, in the United States, Kaposi sarcoma occurs
20 times more often in homosexuals than in hemophiliacs and
intravenous drug users (69), often in the absence of
immunodeficiency (23-26, 67). Thus, specific AIDS diseases are not
transmissible among different risk groups, suggesting that distinct,
nontransmissible pathogens must be primary causes.
Unlike
New Infectious Diseases, AIDS Does Not Spread
Exponentially. AIDS is said to be a new
sexually transmitted disease (17, 18, 36, 45). The epidemiological
hallmark of a new transmissible disease is that it spreads
exponentially until it has saturated a susceptible pool of the
population, a process described by Farr's law (80). Therefore AIDS
would be expected to increase in the sexually active population at
an exponential rate, provided there is at least some promiscuity.
Yet since the AIDS test has been established and AIDS was given its
current definition in 1987 (2), AIDS has spread very slowly,
claiming among >100 million sexually active Americans only
20,000-30,000 cases annually (1).
Epidemiological Evidence That HIV Is Not
Pathogenic
HIV Is
Epidemiologically Not New. Since 1985, when
HIV infection became detectable with the "AIDS test," the number of
infected Americans has remained constant at about 1 million, or 0.4%
of the population (16, 18, 49, 50). Likewise, the percentage of
HIV-positive male and female U.S. Army recruits has remained
constant at 0.03% for 5 years, although >70% of 17- to
19-year-olds are sexually active and about 50% are promiscuous (53,
62). The strikingly constant incidence of HIV indicates that it is
epidemiologically not new in the United States and thus not a
plausible cause for the new epidemic AIDS.
HIV
Depends on Perinatal Transmission for Survival and Is Thus Not
Likely to Be Fatally Pathogenic. Due to the
absence of HIV in the semen of 24 of 25 HIV-positive men, with one
provirus detected per 106 cells (81), and due to the chronic latency
and presence of HIV provirus in only 1 of 500 susceptible
lymphocytes (34, 82), HIV depends on an average of about 500 sexual
contacts to be transmitted (83, 84). Perhaps even more contacts are
necessary, because only about 15% of the wives of hemophiliacs are
HIV-positive (20), although about 75% of severe hemophiliacs in the
United States have been positive for 8-10 years. Therefore it is
unlikely that HIV could survive by sexual transmission. Further, it
is unlikely to be preferentially transmitted by homosexual males,
since about 10% of both males and females frequently practice anal
intercourse (62).
Based on animal
and human models, retroviruses depend almost exclusively on
perinatal transmission for survival. They are very difficult to
transmit horizontally by immune competent animals and humans,
because they are chronically suppressed, first by maternal antibody
and then by the baby's own (76, 77), and possibly also by cellular
suppressors (34). Even retroviruses with sarcomagenic or
leukemogenic oncogenes have never spread horizontally in breeding
colonies (29, 85). Therefore, specific strains of mice, chickens, or
humans from geographically distinct regions are often marked for
generations by distinct strains of perinatally transmitted, latent
retroviruses (85, 86). For example, HTLV is endemic in certain
islands of Japan and marks specific ethnic groups among mixed
populations in the Caribbean (86). Wild animals (29, 85, 86) or
humans (42, 43, 86) with an acute retrovirus infection are virtually
never observed. Acute retrovirus infections result from experimental
infection or horizontal infections among mass-bred animals,
typically prior to immune competence with virus strains not covered
by maternal antibodies (76, 77, 85).
Since perinatal
transmission of HIV is at least 50% efficient (18, 20, 34, 62), and
sexual transmission is <0.2% efficient, it appears that HIV, like
other retroviruses, depends on perinatal transmission for survival.
Therefore, it cannot be fatally pathogenic in most infections within
2-10 years, as postulated by the virus-AIDS hypothesis. This
provides the only plausible explanation for the random distribution
of HIV in even as few as 0.03% of 17- to 19-year-old healthy
Americans (53) and in about 10% of Africans of all ages (31, 34, 49,
51). This explains why no more than 2456 AIDS cases have been
recorded among about 75 million Americans under the age of 19 in the
last 9 years (1), although at least 0.03%, or 25,000, can be
estimated to be perinatally infected (53). It appears that >90%
of perinatally infected Americans are asymptomatic for at least 19
years.
Antibody to HIV Is a Marker for American AIDS
Risks. American AIDS risk groups and
patients are marked by antibodies not only to HIV but also to many
other viruses and microbes, such as cytomegalovirus, hepatitis
virus, herpes simplex virus, HTLV, parvovirus, Epstein-Barr virus,
genital papilloma virus, Treponema, Neisseria,
amoebae, candida, and mycoplasma (1, 5, 6, 10, 12, 54, 57, 67, 75,
78, 87, 88). Among these, antibodies to HIV and HTLV are perhaps the
most specific markers because their prevalence in AIDS patients is
73% (74) and 25% (87), respectively, but only 0.03% (53) and 0.025%
(86) in the general United States population.
Because AIDS
patients carry antibodies to many more viruses and microbes, in
particular, rare ones such as HTLV, than the general population, it
is arbitrary to delineate HIV as an etiologic agent of AIDS by the
presence or titer of antibody alone. In addition, this hypothesis is
inconsistent with the typical sequence of events in which antibodies
follow rather than precede viral pathogenicity (27, 38, 39),
incompatible with HIV-free indicator diseases, and implausible in
the absence of HIV activity (34, 82). As tens of thousands of
positive tests for antibody and hundreds of negative tests for free
virus have shown (34), HIV remains typically dormant in "T-cell
reservoirs" even during AIDS (82). The simultaneous occurrence of
HIV viremia and antiviral antibodies was reported in some AIDS
patients in 1989, but this observation has not been replicated by
others (42, 43). More and more of the AIDS-associated parasites are
now named as AIDS cofactors of HIV, most recently HTLV and
mycoplasma (45, 88).
A consistent
alternative explanation for the high prevalence of antibody to HIV
(and other microbes) in AIDS risk groups and AIDS patients proposes
that HIV is a marker for American AIDS risks (34). The probability
of becoming HIV antibody-positive correlates directly with the
frequency of injecting unsterile drugs (34, 62, 70, 89-91), with the
frequency of transfusions (59-61), and with promiscuity (62, 65, 89,
92). However, in America, only promiscuity aided by aphrodisiac and
psychoactive drugs, practiced mostly by 20 to 40-year-old male
homosexuals and some heterosexuals, seems to correlate with AIDS
diseases (3-7, 62, 67). HIV would thus be a marker for these drugs
and also for the frequent infections by conventional venereal
diseases such as gonorrhea and syphilis (5, 6) which are not part of
the AIDS definition (2), and for the corresponding therapeutic and
prophylactic medications. In fact, HIV was named as a marker for
homosexual promiscuity (92) and recently for an "unknown sexually
transmitted agent" that is presumed to cause Kaposi sarcoma in male
homosexuals (45, 67-69).
However, not
all HIV antibody-positives above those expected from perinatal
transmission (e.g., 0.03% in the United States) must reflect
promiscuity and parenteral infection. Instead, perinatally infected
persons may develop antibodies only with age, as latent proviruses
become activated by transient immunosuppression or other stimuli.
This predicts that the percentage of antibody-positives among
provirus-positives increases with age. The lower incidence of
antibody to HIV in 1- to 14-year-old Zairen children (1-2%) compared
with adults (4-10%) (31) is a case in point. The incidence of
antibody to HTLV also increases with age in countries where HTLV is
endemic, although HTLV is just as difficult to transmit sexually as
HIV (86). An Alternative Hypothesis
Numerous
correlations have linked American AIDS with the consumption of
drugs. The CDC reports that 30% are intravenous drug users (1) but
does not report that another 50-60% have used oral psychoactive
drugs (3-7) and medical drugs, above all the DNA-chain terminator
3'-azido-3'deoxythymidine (AZT) (7, 34). AZT is currently prescribed
to 125,000 sick and healthy HIV-positive persons worldwide,
including about 80,000 Americans, based on annual sales of $284
million and a wholesale price of $2200 for a year of AZT at 500
mg/day (Burroughs Wellcome Annual Report 1990 and Office of Public
Affairs, personal communication). Therefore it is proposed that
either drug consumption (frequently associated with malnutrition) by
recently established behavioral groups or conventional clinical
deficiencies and their treatments are necessary and sufficient to
cause indicator diseases of AIDS. This hypothesis resolves the many
paradoxes of the virus-AIDS hypothesis. (i) American AIDS is
new because of the recent dramatic increase in the consumption of
psychoactive and medical drugs (4, 7, 70, 91). For instance,
cocaine-related hospital emergencies increased 5-fold from 1984 to
1988 (93). (ii) American AIDS is prevalent in 20- to
40-year-old men, although not one AIDS disease is male-specific, and
this age group is the least likely to develop any diseases. The
reason is that men of this age group consume 80% of hard
psychoactive drugs (94). (iii) The vastly different AIDS
diseases are caused by different pathogens, pathogenic conditions,
and their treatments. This also explains "AIDS diseases" that do not
depend on immunodeficiency and occur without it, including Kaposi
sarcoma, lymphoma, dementia, and wasting disease (1, 2, 23-26, 34,
67). (iv) African AIDS would be old diseases caused by
malnutrition and parasitic infections under a new name, the reason
why it is equally distributed between the sexes (16, 51). (v)
The long and unpredictable latent periods between infection by HIV
and specific AIDS diseases are the product of functionally unrelated
events: the pathogenic events necessary to reach an individual's
threshold for AIDS diseases, and infection by the marker HIV.
Acknowledgments
I thank Walter
Gilbert, Howard Green, Barbara McClintock, Sheldon Penman, Robert
Root-Bernstein, and Harry Rubin for critical and constructive
reviews of the manuscript and Robert Da Prato, Bryan Ellison, Harry
Haverkos, Robert Hoffman, Marion Koerper, Anthony Liversidge,
Charles Ortleb, Claus Pierach, Russell Schoch, John Scythes, Joan
Shenton, Joseph Sonnabend, Charles Thomas, and Michael
Verney-Elliott for comments and essential information. I am
supported by Outstanding Investigator Grant 5-R35-CA39915-06 from
the National Cancer Institute.
Notes and
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