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Part
2
AIDS Acquired by Drug Consumption and Other Noncontagious Risk Factors
By Peter H. Duesberg
Pharmacology
& Therapeutics 55: 201-277, 1992
Contents
Part 2
3. Discrepancies
Between AIDS and Infectious Disease
3.1. Criteria
of infectious and noninfectious disease
3.2. AIDS not
compatible with infectious disease
3.3. No proof
for the virus-AIDS hypothesis
3.3.1. Virus hypothesis
fails to meet Koch's postulates
3.3.2. Anti-HIV
immunity does not protect against AIDS
3.3.3. Antiviral
drugs do not protect against AIDS
3.3.4.
All AIDS-defining diseases occur in the absence of HIV
3.4.
Noncorrelations between HIV and AIDS
3.4.1. Only about
half of American AIDS is confirmed HIV-antibody positive
3.4.2. Antibody-positive,
but virus-negative AIDS
3.4.3. HIV: just
one of many harmless microbial markers of behavioral and clinical
AIDS risks
3.4.4.
Annual AIDS risks of different HIV-infected risk groups, including
babies, homosexuals, drug addicts, hemophiliacs and Africans, differ
over 100-fold
3.4.5. Specific
AIDS diseases predetermined by prior health risks
3.5. Assumptions
and anecdotal cases that appear to support the virus-AIDS hypothesis
3.5.1. HIV is
presumed new because AIDS is new
3.5.2. HIV-assumed
to be sexually transmitted-depends on perinatal transmission for survival
3.5.3. AIDS assumed
to be proportional to HIV infection
3.5.4. AIDS assumed
to be homosexually transmitted in the U.S. and Europe
3.5.5. AIDS assumed
to be heterosexually transmitted by African "lifestyle"
3.5.6. HIV claimed
to be abundant in AIDS cases
3.5.7. HIV to
depend on cofactors for AIDS
3.5.8. All AIDS
diseases to result from immunodeficiency
3.5.9. HIV to
induce AIDS via autoimmunity and apoptosis
3.5.10. HIV assumed
to kill T-cells
3.5.11. Antibodies
assumed not to neutralize HIV
3.5.12. HIV claimed
to cause AIDS in 50% within 10 years
3.5.13. HIV said
to derive pathogenicity from constant mutation
3.5.14. HIV assumed
to cause AIDS with genes unique among retroviruses
3.5.15. Simian
retroviruses to prove that HIV causes AIDS
3.5.16. Anecdotal
AIDS cases from the general population
3.6. Consequences
of the virus-AIDS hypothesis
3. Discrepancies
Between AIDS and Infectious Disease
3.1. Criteria
of Infectious and Noninfectious Disease
The correct
hypothesis explaining the cause of AIDS must predict the fundamental
differences between the two main AIDS epidemics and the bewildering
heterogeneity of the 25 AIDS diseases. In addition, the cause of
American/European AIDS should make clear why-in an era of ever-improving
health parameters, population growth and decreasing mortality (The
Software Toolworks World Atlas, 1992; Anderson and May, 1992)-suddenly
a subgroup of mostly 20- to 45-year-old males would die from diverse
microbial and nonmicrobial diseases. The mortality from all infectious
diseases combined has been reduced to less than 1% in the Western
World (Cairns, 1978) through advanced sanitation and nutrition (Section
6) (McKeown, 1979; Moberg and Cohn, 1991; Oppenheimer, 1992). Further,
20- to 45-year-olds are the least likely to die from any disease
(Mims and White, 1984). Their relative immunity to all diseases
is why they are recruited as soldiers. The correct AIDS hypothesis
would also have to explain why only a small group of about 20,000
Africans have developed AIDS diseases annually since 1985 (Table
1), during a time in which Central Africa enjoyed the fastest population
growth in the world, i.e. 3% (The Software Toolworks World Atlas,
1992).
The sudden
appearance of AIDS could signal a new microbe, i.e. infectious AIDS.
Yet the suddenness of AIDS could just as well signal one or several
new toxins, such as the many new psychoactive drugs that have become
popular in America and Europe since the Vietnam War (Section 4).
Based on common
characteristics of all orthodox infectious diseases, infectious
AIDS would be predicted to:
(1) Spread
randomly between the sexes. This is just as true for venereal as
for other infectious diseases (Judson et al., 1980; Haverkos,
1990).
(2) Cause
primary disease within weeks or months after infection, because
infectious agents multiply exponentially in susceptible hosts until
stopped by immunity. They are self-replicating, and thus fast acting
toxins. (Although "slow" viruses are thought to be pathogenic
long after neutralization by antiviral immunity (Evans, 1989c),
slow pathogenicity by a neutralized virus has never been experimentally
proven (Section 6.1).)
(3) Coincide
with a common, active and abundant microbe in all cases of the same
disease. (Inactive microbes or microbes at low concentrations are
harmless passengers, e.g. lysogenic bacteriophages, endogenous and
latent retroviruses (Weiss et al., 1985), latent herpes virus
or latent ubiquitous Pneumocystis and Candida infections
(Freeman, 1979; Pifer, 1984; Williford Pifer et al., 1988).
Hibernation is a proven microbial strategy of survival, which allows
indefinite coexistence with the host without pathogenicity.)
(4) Coincides
with a microbe that lyses or renders nonfunctional more cells than
the host can spare or regenerate.
(5) Generate
a predictable pattern of symptoms.
By contrast
non-infectious AIDS, caused by toxins, would be predicted to:
(1) Spread
nonrandomly, according to exposure to toxins. For example, lung
cancer and emphysema were observed much more frequently in men than
in women 20 years ago, because men consumed much more tobacco than
women 30-40 years ago (Cairns, 1978).
(2) Follow
intoxication after variable intervals as determined by lifetime
dosage and personal thresholds for disease. These intervals would
be considerably longer than those between microbes and disease,
because microbes are self-replicating toxins. For example, lung
cancer and emphysema are "acquired" only after 10-20 years
of smoking, and liver cirrhosis is "acquired" only after
10-20 years of alcoholism.
(3) Manifest
toxin-specific and intoxication site-specific diseases, e.g. cigarettes
causing lung cancer and alcohol causing liver cirrhosis.
3.2. AIDS Not
Compatible with Infectious Disease
All direct
parameters of AIDS are incompatible with classical criteria of infectious
disease:
(1) Unlike
conventional infectious diseases, including venereal diseases (Judson
et al., 1980), American/European AIDS is nonrandomly (90%)
restricted to males, although no AIDS disease is male-specific (Table
1).
(2) The long
and unpredictable intervals between infection and "acquiring"
primary AIDS symptoms-averaging two years in infants and 10 years
in adults, and termed "latent periods of HIV"-stand in
sharp contrast to the short intervals of days or weeks between infection
and primary disease observed with all classical viruses, including
retroviruses (Duesberg, 1987; Duesberg and Schwartz, 1992). These
short intervals reflect the time periods, that all exponentially
growing microbes with generation times of half-hours, and viruses
including HIV (Clark et al., 1991; Daar et al., 1991)
with generation times of 8-48 hr need to reach immunogenic and thus
potentially pathogenic concentrations (Fenner et al., 1974;
Freeman, 1979; Mims and White, 1984). Once stopped by immunity,
conventional viruses and microbes are no longer pathogenic. Thus
long latent periods between immunity against a microbe and a given
disease are incompatible with conventional microbial causes, including
HIV (Section 3.5.14). The discrepancy of eight years between the
hypothetical "latent periods of HIV" in infants and adults
presents a secondary paradox.
Nevertheless,
HIV could possibly play a role in AIDS if it were consistently reactivated
by an "acquired immunodeficiency"-10 years after it was
neutralized by antibodies (Section 3.4.2)-just as Candida,
Pneumocystis and cytomegalovirus play roles in AIDS if they
are activated by "acquired immunodeficiency." However,
HIV is nearly always inactive even during acquired immunodeficiency
(Sections 3.3.1 and 3.5.6). In the absence of HIV reactivation during
AIDS, long hypothetical latent periods are simply statistical artifacts.
They are conceived to link HIV with AIDS and to buy time for the
real causes of AIDS to generate AIDS-defining diseases.
(3) There
is no active microbe common to all AIDS patients, and no common
group of target cells are lysed or rendered nonfunctional (Sections
3.3 and 3.5.10).
(4) There
is no common, predictable pattern of AIDS symptoms in patients of
different risk groups. Instead, different risk groups have characteristic
AIDS diseases (Sections 2.1.3, 3.4.4 and 3.4.5).
Thus AIDS
does not meet even one of the classical criteria of infectious disease.
In a recent response to these arguments, Goudsmit, a proponent of
the HIV-AIDS hypothesis, confirmed that "AIDS does not have
the characteristics of an ordinary infectious disease. This view
is incontrovertible" (Goudsmit, 1992). Likewise, the epidemiologists
Eggers and Weyer conclude that "the spread of AIDS does not
behave like the spread of a disease that is caused by a single sexually
transmitted agent" (Eggers and Weyer, 1991) and hence have
"simulated a cofactor [that] cannot be identified with any
known infectious agent" (Weyer and Eggers, 1990). Anderson
and May (1992) had to invent "assortative scenarios" for
different AIDS risk groups to reconcile AIDS with infectious disease.
Indeed, AIDS would never have been accepted as infectious without
the numerous unique assumptions that have been made to accommodate
HIV as its cause (Sections 3.5 and 6.1). 3.3.
No Proof for the Virus-AIDS Hypothesis
Despite research
efforts that exceed those on all other viruses combined and have
generated over 60,000 papers on HIV (Christensen, 1991), it has
not been possible to prove that HIV causes AIDS. These staggering
statistics illustrate that the virus-AIDS hypothesis is either not
provable or is very difficult to prove.
Proof for
pathogenicity of a virus depends either on (1) meeting Koch's classical
postulates, (2) preventing pathogenicity through vaccination, (3)
curing disease with antiviral drugs or (4) preventing disease by
preventing infection. However, the HIV-hypothesis fails all of these
criteria.
3.3.1. Virus
Hypothesis Fails to Meet Koch's Postulates
Koch's postulates
may be summarized as follows: (i) the agent occurs in each case
of a disease and in amounts sufficient to cause pathological effects;
(ii) the agent is not found in other diseases; and (iii) after isolation
and propagation in culture, the agent can induce the disease anew
(Merriam-Webster, 1965; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990).
But:
(i) HIV is
certainly not present in all AIDS patients, and even antibody against
HIV is not found in all patients who have AIDS-defining diseases.
HIV is not even present in all persons who die from multiple indicator-diseases
plus general immune system failure-the paradigm AIDS cases (Sections
3.4 and 4.5). In addition, HIV is never present "in amounts
sufficient to cause pathological effects" based on the following
evidence:
(1) On average
only 1 in 500 to 3000 T-cells, or 1 in 1500 to 8000 leukocytes of
AIDS patients are infected by HIV (Schnittman et al., 1989;
Simmonds et al., 1990). (About 35% of leukocytes are T-cells
(Walton et al., 1986).) A recent study, relying on in situ
amplification of a proviral HIV DNA fragment with the polymerase
chain reaction, detects HIV DNA in 1 of 10 to 1 of 1000 leukocytes
of AIDS patients. However, the authors acknowledge that the in
situ method cannot distinguish between intact and defective
proviruses and may include false-positives, because it does not
characterize the amplified DNA products (Bagasra et al.,
1992). Indeed the presence of 1 provirus per 10 or even 100 cells
is exceptional in AIDS patients. This is why direct hybridization
with viral DNA, a technique that is capable of seeing 1 provirus
per 10 to 100 cells, typically fails to detect HIV DNA in AIDS patients
(Duesberg, 1989c). According to one study, "The most striking
feature ... is the extremely low level of HIV provirus present in
circulating PBMCs (peripheral blood mononuclear cells) in most cases"
(Simmonds et al., 1990).
Since on average
only 0.1% (1 out of 500 to 3000) of T-cells are ever infected by
HIV in AIDS patients, but at least 3% of all T-cells are regenerated
(Sprent, 1977; Guyton, 1987) during the two days it takes a retrovirus
to infect a cell (Duesberg, 1989c), HIV could never kill enough
T-cells to cause immunodeficiency. Thus even if HIV killed every
infected T-cell (Section 3.5.10), it could deplete T-cells only
at 1/30 of their normal rate of regeneration, let alone activated
regeneration. The odds of HIV causing T-cell deficiency would be
the same as those of a bicycle rider trying to catch up with a jet
airplane.
(2) It is
also inconsistent with a common pathogenic mechanism that the fraction
of HIV-infected leukocytes in patients with the same AIDS diseases
varies 30- to 100-fold. One study reports that the fraction of infected
cells ranges from 1 in 900 to 1 in 30,000 (Simmonds et al.,
1990), and another reports that it ranges from 1 in 10 to 1 in 1000
(Bagasra et al., 1992). In all conventional viral diseases
the degree of pathogenicity is directly proportional to the number
of infected cells.
(3) It is
entirely inconsistent with HIV-mediated pathogenicity that there
are over 40-times more HIV-infected leukocytes in many healthy HIV
carriers than in AIDS patients with fatal AIDS (Simmonds et al.,
1990; Bagasra et al., 1992). Simmonds et al. report
that there are from 1 in 700 to 1 in 83,000 HIV-infected leukocytes
in healthy HIV carriers and from 1 in 900 to 1 in 30,000 in AIDS
patients. Bagasra et al. report that there are from 1 in
30 to 1 in 1000 infected leukocytes in healthy carriers and from
1 in 10 to 1 in 1000 in patients with fatal AIDS. Thus there are
healthy persons with 43 times (30,000:700) and 33 times (1000:30)
more HIV-infected cells than in AIDS patients.
(4) In terms
of HIV's biological function, it is even more important that the
levels of HIV RNA synthesis in AIDS are either extremely low or
even nonexistent. Only 1 in 10,000 to 100,000 leukocytes express
viral RNA in 50% of AIDS patients. In the remaining 50% no HIV expression
is detectable (Duesberg, 1989c; Simmonds et al., 1990). The
very fact that amplification by the polymerase chain reaction must
be used to detect HIV DNA or RNA (Semple et al., 1991) in
AIDS patients indicates that not enough viral RNA can be made or
is made in AIDS patients to explain any, much less fatal, pathogenicity
based on conventional precedents (Duesberg and Schwartz, 1992).
The amplification method is designed to detect a needle in a haystack,
but a needle in a haystack is not sufficient to cause a fatal disease,
even if it consists of plutonium or cyanide.
(5) In several
AIDS diseases, that are not caused by immunodeficiency (Section
3.5.8), HIV is not even present in the diseased tissues, e.g. there
is no trace of HIV in any Kaposi's sarcomas (Salahuddin et al.,
1988) and there is no HIV in neurons of patients with dementia,
because of the generic inability of retroviruses to infect nondividing
cells like neurons (Sections 3.5.8 and 3.5.10) (Duesberg, 1989c).
As a result,
there is typically no free HIV in AIDS patients (Section 3.5.6).
Indeed, the scarcity of infectious HIV in typical AIDS patients
is the reason that neutralizing antibodies, rather than virus, have
become the diagnostic basis of AIDS. It is also the reason that
on average 5 million leukocytes of HIV-positives must be cultured
to activate ("isolate") HIV from AIDS patients. Even under
these conditions it may take up to 15 different isolation efforts
(!) to get just one infectious virus out of an HIV carrier (Weiss
et al., 1988). The scarcity of HIV and HIV-infected cells
in AIDS patients is also the very reason for the notorious difficulties
experienced by leading American (Hamilton, 1991; Palca, 1991a; Crewdson,
1992) and British (Connor, 1991, 1992; Weiss, 1991) AIDS researchers
in isolating, and in attributing credit for isolating HIV from AIDS
patients.
(ii) HIV does
not meet Koch's second postulate, because it is found not just in
one, but in 25 distinct diseases, many as unrelated to each other
as dementia and diarrhea, or Kaposi's sarcoma and pneumonia (Table
1, Section 2.1.2).
(iii) HIV
also fails Koch's third postulate, because it fails to cause AIDS
when experimentally inoculated into chimpanzees which make antibodies
against HIV just like their human cousins (Blattner et al.,
1988; Institute of Medicine, 1988; Evans, 1989b; Weiss and Jaffe,
1990). Up to 150 chimpanzees have been inoculated since 1983 and
all are still healthy (Duesberg, 1989c) (Jorg Eichberg, personal
communication, see Section 1). HIV also fails to cause AIDS when
accidentally introduced into humans (Duesberg, 1989c, 1991a).
There is,
however, a legitimate limitation of Koch's postulates, namely that
most microbial pathogens are only conditionally pathogenic (Stewart,
1968; McKeown, 1979; Moberg and Cohn, 1991). They are pathogenic
only if the immune system is low, allowing infection or intoxication
of the large numbers of cells that must be killed or altered for
pathogenicity. This is true for tuberculosis bacillus, cholera,
influenza virus, polio virus and many others (Freeman, 1979; Mims
and White, 1984; Evans, 1989c).
However, even
with such limitations HIV fails the third postulate. The scientific
literature has yet to prove that even one health care worker has
contracted AIDS from the over 206,000 American AIDS patients during
the last 10 years, and that even one of thousands of scientists
has developed AIDS from HIV, which they propagate in their laboratories
and companies (Section 3.5.16) (Duesberg, 1989c, 1991a). AIDS is
likewise not contagious to family members living with AIDS patients
for at least 100 days in the same household (Friedland et al.,
1986; Sande, 1986; Hearst and Hulley, 1988; Peterman et al.,
1988). However the CDC has recently claimed that seven health care
workers have developed AIDS from occupational infection (Centers
for Disease Control, 1992c). But the CDC has failed to provide any
evidence against nonoccupational causation, such as drug addiction
(see Section 4). Indeed thousands of health care workers, e.g. 2586
by 1988 (Centers for Disease Control, 1988), have developed AIDS
from nonprofessional causes. In addition the CDC has failed to report
the AIDS diseases of the seven patients and those of their putative
donors, has failed to report their sex (see next paragraph) and
whether these patients developed AIDS only after AZT treatment (see
Section 4) (Centers for Disease Control, 1992c). The failure of
HIV to meet the third postulate is all the more definitive since
there is no antiviral drug or vaccine. Imagine what would happen
if there were 206,000 polio or viral hepatitis patients in our hospitals
and no health care workers were vaccinated!
Contrary to
expectations that health care workers would be the first to be affected
by infectious AIDS, the AIDS risk of those health care workers that
have treated the 206,000 American AIDS patients is in fact lower
than that of the general population, based on the following data.
The CDC reports that about 75% of the American health care workers
are females, but that 92% of the AIDS patients among health care
workers are males (Centers for Disease Control, 1988). Thus the
AIDS risk of male health care workers is 35 times higher than that
of females, indicating nonprofessional AIDS causes.
Moreover,
the CDC reports that the incidence of AIDS among health care workers
is percentagewise the same as that in the general population, i.e.
by 1988, 2586 out of 5 million health care workers, or 1/2000 had
developed AIDS (Centers for Disease Control, 1988), by the same
time 110,000 out of the 250 million Americans, or 1/2250, had developed
AIDS (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b). Since health care workers
are nearly all over 20 years old and since there is virtually no
AIDS in those under 20 (Table 1), but those under 20 make up about
1/3 of the general population, it can be estimated that the AIDS
risk of health care workers is actually 1/3 lower (1/3 times 1/2000)
than that of the general population-hardly an argument for infectious
AIDS.
In view of
this, leading AIDS researchers have acknowledged that HIV fails
Koch's postulates as the cause of AIDS (Blattner et al.,
1988; Evans, 1989a,b; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990; Gallo, 1991). Nevertheless,
they have argued that the failure of HIV to meet Koch's postulates
invalidates these postulates rather than HIV as the cause of AIDS
(Section 6.1) (Evans, 1989b, 1992; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990; Gallo,
1991). But the failure of a suspected pathogen to meet Koch's postulates
neither invalidates the timeless logic of Koch's postulates nor
any claim that a suspect causes a disease (Duesberg, 1989b). It
only means that the suspected pathogen cannot be proven responsible
for a disease by Koch's postulates-but perhaps by new laws of causation
(Section 6).
3.3.2. Anti-HIV
Immunity Does Not Protect Against AIDS
Natural antiviral
antibodies, or vaccination, against HIV-which completely neutralize
HIV to virtually undetectable levels-are consistently diagnosed
in AIDS patients with the "AIDS test." Yet these antibodies
consistently fail to protect against AIDS diseases (Section 3.5.11)
(Duesberg, 1989b,c, 1991a; Evans, 1989a,b). According to Evans,
"The dilemma in HIV is that antibody is not protective"
(Evans, 1989a).
By contrast,
all other viral diseases are prevented or cured by antiviral immunity.
Indeed, since Jennerian vaccination in the late 18th century, antiviral
immunity has been the only protection against viral disease. In
view of this HIV researchers have argued that antibodies do not
neutralize this virus (Section 3.5.11) instead of considering that
HIV may not be the cause of AIDS.
3.3.3. Antiviral
Drugs Do Not Protect Against AIDS
All anti-HIV
drugs fail to prevent or cure AIDS diseases (Section 4).
3.3.4. All
AIDS-defining Diseases Occur in the Absence of HIV
The absence
of HIV does not prevent AIDS-defining diseases from occurring in
all AIDS risk groups, it only prevents their diagnosis as AIDS (Sections
3.4.4, 4.5 and 4.7).
Thus, there
is no proof for the virus-AIDS hypothesis-not even that AIDS is
contagious. Instead, the virus-AIDS hypothesis is based only on
circumstantial evidence, including epidemiological correlations
and anecdotal cases (Sections 3.4 and 3.5). 3.4.
Noncorrelations Between HIV and AIDS
Leading AIDS
researchers acknowledge that correlations are the only support for
the virus-AIDS hypothesis. For example, Blattner et al. state,
"... overwhelming seroepidemiologic evidence (is) pointing
toward HIV as the cause of AIDS ... Better methods ... show that
HIV infection is present in essentially all AIDS patients"
(Blattner et al., 1988). According to an editorial in Science,
Baltimore deduces from studies reporting an 88% correlation between
antibodies to HIV and AIDS: "This was the kind of evidence
we are looking for. It distinguishes between a virus that was a
passenger and one that was the cause" (Booth, 1988). The studies
Baltimore relied on are those published by Gallo et al. in
Science in 1984 that are the basis for the virus-AIDS hypothesis
(Gallo et al., 1984; Sarngadharan et al., 1984), but
their authenticity has since been questioned on several counts (Beardsley,
1986; Schupach, 1986; Connor, 1987; Crewdson, 1989; Hamilton, 1991;
Palca, 1991a; Crewdson, 1992). Weiss and Jaffe concur that "the
evidence that HIV causes AIDS is epidemiological ..." (Weiss
and Jaffe, 1990), although Gallo concedes that epidemiology is just
"one hell of a good beginning" (Gallo, 1991). In view
of correlations it is argued that "persons infected with HIV
will develop AIDS and those not so infected will not" (Evans,
1989a), or that "HIV ... is the sine qua non for the
epidemic" (Gallo, 1991).
But correlations
are only circumstantial evidence for a hypothesis. According to
Sherlock Holmes, "Circumstantial evidence is a very tricky
thing. It may seem to point very straight to one thing, but if you
shift your point of view a little, you may find it pointing in an
equally uncompromising manner to something entirely different"
(Doyle, 1928). The risk in epidemiological studies is that the cause
may be difficult to distinguish from noncausal associations. For
example, yellow fingers are noncausally and smoking is causally
associated with lung cancer. "In epidemiological parlance,
the issue at stake is that of confounding" (Smith and Phillips,
1992). This is true for the "overwhelming seroepidemiologic
evidence" claimed to support the virus-AIDS hypothesis on the
following grounds.
3.4.1. Only
about Half of American AIDS is Confirmed HIV-antibody-positive
In the U.S.
antibodies against HIV are only confirmed in about 50% of all AIDS
diagnoses; the remainder are presumptively diagnosed (Institute
of Medicine, 1988; Selik et al., 1990). Several studies indicate
that the natural coincidence between antibodies against HIV and
AIDS diseases is not perfect, because all AIDS defining diseases
occur in all AIDS risk groups in the absence of HIV (Section 4).
Ironically, the CDC never records the incidence of HIV in its HIV/AIDS
Surveillance Reports (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b).
It follows
that the reportedly perfect correlation between HIV and AIDS is
in reality an artifact of the definition of AIDS and of allowances
for presumptive diagnoses (Centers for Disease Control, 1987; Institute
of Medicine, 1988). Since AIDS has been defined exclusively as diseases
occurring in the presence of antibody to HIV (Section 2.2), the
diagnosis of AIDS is biased by its definition toward a 100% correlation
with HIV. That is why "persons infected by HIV will develop
AIDS and ... those not so infected will not" (Evans, 1989a),
and why HIV is the "sine qua non" of AIDS (Gallo,
1991).
3.4.2. Antibody-positive,
but Virus-negative AIDS
The correlations
between AIDS and HIV are in fact not correlations with HIV, but
with antibodies against HIV (Sarngadharan et al., 1984; Blattner
et al., 1988; Duesberg, 1989c). But antibodies signal immunity
against viruses, signal neutralization of viruses, and thus protection
against viral disease-not a prognosis for a future disease as is
claimed for antibodies against HIV. For example, antibody-positive
against polio virus and measles virus means virus-negative, and
thus protection against the corresponding viral diseases. The same
is true for antibodies against HIV: antibody-positive means very
much virus-negative. Residual virus or viral molecules are almost
undetectable in most antibody-positive persons (Sections 3.3 and
3.5.6). Thus antibodies against HIV are not evidence for a future
or current HIV disease unless additional assumptions are made (Section
3.5.11).
3.4.3. HIV:
Just One of Many Harmless Microbial Markers of Behavioral and Clinical
AIDS Risks
In addition
to antibodies against HIV, there are antibodies against many other
passenger viruses and microbes in AIDS risk groups and AIDS patients
(Sections 2.3 and 4.3.2). These include cytomegalovirus, hepatitis
virus, Epstein-Barr virus, Human T-cell Leukemia Virus-I (HTLV-I),
herpes virus, gonorrhea, syphilis, mycoplasma, amoebae, tuberculosis,
toxoplasma and many others (Gallo et al., 1983; Sonnabend
et al., 1983; Blattner et al., 1985; Mathur-Wagh et
al., 1985; Darrow et al., 1987; Quinn et al.,
1987; Messiah et al., 1988; Stewart, 1989; Goldsmith, 1990;
Mills and Masur, 1990; Root-Bernstein, 1990a,c; Duesberg, 1991a;
Buimovici-Klein et al., 1988). In addition, there are between
100 and 150 chronically latent retroviruses in the human germ line
(Martin et al., 1981; Nakamura et al., 1991). These
human retroviruses are in every cell, not just in a few like HIV,
and have the same genetic structure and complexity as HIV and all
other retroviruses (Duesberg, 1989c). According to Quinn et al.,
"Common to African patients with AIDS and outpatient controls
and American patients with AIDS and homosexual men was the finding
of extremely high prevalence rates of antibody to CMV (range, 92-100%),
HSV (range, 90-100%), hepatitis B virus (range, 78-82%), hepatitis
A virus (range, 82-95%), EBV capsid antigen (100%), syphilis (11-23%),
and T. gondii (51-74%). In contrast, the prevalence of antibody
to each of these infectious agents was significantly lower among
the 100 American heterosexual men ..." (Quinn et al.,
1987). Thus, the incidence of many human parasites, both rare and
common, is high in typical AIDS patients and in typical AIDS risk
groups (Sections 2.3 and 5). However, none of these microbes are
fatal and nearly all are harmless to a normal immune system (Section
2.3).
Most of these
parasites, including HIV, have been accumulated by AIDS risk behavior
and by clinical AIDS risks (Blattner et al., 1985; Institute
of Medicine, 1988; Stewart, 1989). Such behavior includes the long-term
injection of unsterile, recreational "street" drugs and
large numbers of sexual contacts promoted by oral and injected aphrodisiac
drugs (Section 4) (Dismukes et al., 1968; Darrow et al.,
1987; Des Jarlais et al., 1987; Espinoza et al., 1987;
Moss, 1987; Moss et al., 1987; van Griensven et al.,
1987; Des Jarlais et al., 1988; Messiah et al., 1988;
Chaisson et al., 1989; Weiss, S.H., 1989; Deininger et
al., 1990; McKegney et al., 1990; Stark et al.,
1990; Luca-Moretti, 1992; Seage et al., 1992). Clinical risk
groups, such as hemophiliacs, accumulate such viruses and microbes
from occasionally contaminated transfusions (Section 3.4.4).
It follows
that a high correlation between AIDS and antibodies against one
particular virus, such as HIV, does not "distinguish between
a virus that was a passenger and one that was a cause" (Baltimore,
see above) (Booth, 1988). It is an expected consequence or marker
of behavioral and clinical AIDS risks, particularly in countries
where the percentage of HIV carriers is low (Duesberg, 1991a). In
addition to HIV, many other microbes and viruses which are rare
and inactive, or just inactive, in the general population, such
as hepatitis virus, are "specific" for AIDS patients,
and thus markers for AIDS risks (Sections 2.2, 2.3 and 4.3.2). For
example, 100% of AIDS patients within certain cohorts, not just
50% as with HIV (Section 2.2), were shown to have antibodies against,
or acute infections of, cytomegalovirus (Gottlieb et al.,
1981; Francis, 1983; van Griensven et al., 1987; Buimovici-Klein
et al., 1988). A comparison of 481 HIV-positive with 1499
HIV-negative homosexual men in Berlin found that the HIV-positives
were "significantly more often carriers of antibodies against
hepatitis A virus, hepatitis B virus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr
virus and syphilis" (Deininger et al., 1990). And the
frequent occurrence of antibodies against hepatitis B virus in cohorts
of homosexual AIDS patients, termed "hepatitis cohorts,"
was a precedent, that helped to convince the CDC to drop the "lifestyle"
hypothesis of AIDS in favor of the "hepatitis analogy"
(Francis et al., 1983; Centers for Disease Control, 1986;
Oppenheimer, 1992) (Section 2.2).
The higher
the consumption of unsterile, injected drugs, the more sexual contacts
mediated by aphrodisiac drugs and the more transfusions received,
the more accidentally contaminating microbes will be accumulated
(Sections 3.4.4.5, 4.3.2 and 4.5). In Africa antibodies against
HIV and hepatitis virus are poor markers for AIDS risks, because
millions carry antibodies against these viruses (Table 1) (Quinn
et al., 1987; Evans, 1989c; Blattner, 1991). Thus it is arbitrary
to consider HIV the AIDS "driver" rather than just one
of the many innocent microbial passengers of AIDS patients (Francis,
1983), because it is neither distinguished by its unique presence
nor by its unique biochemical activity.
3.4.4. Annual
AIDS Risks of Different HIV-infected Risk Groups, Including Babies,
Homosexuals, Drug Addicts, Hemophiliacs and Africans, Differ over
100-fold
If HIV were
the cause of AIDS the annual AIDS risks of all infected persons
should be similar, particularly if they are from the same country.
Failure of HIV to meet this prediction would indicate that HIV is
not a sufficient cause of AIDS. The occurrence of the same AIDS-defining
diseases in HIV-free controls would indicate that HIV is not even
necessary for AIDS.
3.4.4.1.
Critically ill recipients of transfusions. The annual AIDS
risk of HIV-infected American recipients of transfusions (other
than hemophiliacs) is about 50%, as half of all recipients die within
one year after receiving a transfusion (Table 2) (Ward et al.,
1989).
Table 2. Annual
AIDS Risks of HIV-infected Groups*
HIV-infected
group Annual AIDS Group-specific in percent diseases
American recipients
50 pneumonia, opportunistic of transfusions infectionsAmerican babies
25 dementia, bacterialMale homosexuals 4-6 Kaposi's sarcomausing sexual
stimulants Intravenous drug users 4-6 tuberculosis, wastingAmerican
hemophiliacs 2 pneumonia, opportunistic infectionsGerman hemophiliacs
1 pneumonia, opportunistic infectionsAmerican teenagers 0.16-1.7 hemophilia-relatedAmerican
general population 0. 1-1 opportunistic infectionsAfricans 0.3 fever,
diarrhea, tuberculosisThais 0.05 tuberculosis
*Based on
controlled studies, it is proposed that the health risks of all
HIV-infected AIDS risk groups are the same as those of matched HIV-free
controls (Sections 3.4.4, 4 and 5). The virus hypothesis simply
claims the specific morbidity of each of these groups for HIV.
Since the
AIDS risk of transfusion recipients is much higher than the national
3-4% average, nonviral factors must play a role (Table 1). Indeed,
about 50% of American recipients of transfusions without HIV also
die within 1 year after receiving a transfusion (Hardy et al.,
1985; Ward et al., 1989), and over 60% within 3 years (Bove
et al., 1987). Moreover, the AIDS risk of transfusion recipients
increases 3-6 times faster with the volume of blood received than
their risk of infection by HIV (Hardy et al., 1985; Ward
et al., 1989). This indicates that the illnesses that necessitated
the transfusions are responsible for the mortality of the transfusion
recipients. Yet the virus hypothesis claims the relatively high
mortality of American transfusion patients for HIV without considering
HIV-free controls. The hypothesis also fails to consider that the
effects of HIV on transfusion mortality should be practically undetectable
in the face of the high mortality of transfusion recipients and
its postulate that HIV causes AIDS on average only 10 years after
infection.
3.4.4.2.
HIV-infected babies. The second highest annual AIDS risk is
reported for perinatally infected American babies, whose health
has been compromised by maternal drug addiction or by congenital
diseases like hemophilia (Section 2.1.3). They develop AIDS diseases
on average two years after birth (Anderson and May, 1988; Blattner
et al., 1988; Institute of Medicine, 1988; Blattner, 1991).
This corresponds to an annual AIDS risk of 25% (Table 2).
Since the
AIDS risk of babies is much higher than the national average of
3-4% (Table 1), nonviral factors must play a role in pediatric AIDS.
Based on correlations and controlled studies documenting AIDS-defining
diseases in HIV-free babies, it is proposed below that maternal
drug consumption (Section 4) and congenital diseases, like hemophilia
(Section 3.4.4.5), are the causes of pediatric AIDS. Indeed, before
AIDS surfaced, many studies had shown that maternal drug addiction
was sufficient to cause AIDS-defining diseases in newborns (Section
4.6.1). In accord with this proposal it is shown that HIV is naturally
a perinatally transmitted retrovirus-and thus harmless (Section
3.5.2).
3.4.4.3.
HIV-positive homosexuals. The annual AIDS risk of HIV-infected
male homosexuals with hundreds of sex partners, who frequently use
aphrodisiac drugs (Section 4), was originally estimated at about
6% (Mathur-Wagh et al., 1985; Anderson and May, 1988; Institute
of Medicine, 1988; Lui et al., 1988; Moss et al.,
1988; Turner et al., 1989; Lemp et al., 1990; van
Griensven et al., 1990; Blattner, 1991). As more HIV-positives
became identified, lower estimates of about 4% were reported (Table
2) (Rezza et al., 1990; Biggar and the International Registry
of Seroconverters, 1990; Munoz et al., 1992).
Since the
annual AIDS risk of such homosexual men is higher than the national
average, group-specific factors must be necessary for their specific
AIDS diseases. Based on correlations with drug consumption and studies
of HIV-free homosexuals, it is proposed here that the cumulative
consumption of sexual stimulants and psychoactive drugs determines
the annual AIDS risk of homosexuals (Sections 4.4 and 4.5). Indeed,
all AIDS-defining diseases were observed in male homosexuals from
behavioral risk groups before HIV was discovered and have since
been observed in HIV-free homosexuals from AIDS risk groups (Sections
4.5 and 4.7).
In the spirit
of the virus-AIDS hypothesis, many of these HIV-free homosexual
AIDS cases have been blamed on various retrovirus-like particles,
papilloma viruses, other viruses and microbes by researchers who
have not investigated drug use, particularly not oral drug use.
These cases include 153 immunodeficient HIV-free homosexuals with
T4/T8-cell ratios below 1 (Drew et al., 1985; Weber et
al., 1986; Novick et al., 1986; Collier et al.,
1987; Bartholomew et al., 1987; Buimovici-Klein et al.,
1988) and 23 HIV-free Kaposi's sarcomas (Afrasiabi et al.,
1986; Ho et al., 1989b; Bowden et al., 1991; Safai
et al., 1991; Castro et al., 1992; Huang et al.,
1992) (see also Note added in proof).
3.4.4.4.
HIV-positive intravenous drug users. Application of the annual
AIDS risk of male homosexual risk groups led to valid predictions
for the annual AIDS risk of intravenous drug users (Lemp et al.,
1990). Therefore the annual AIDS risk of HIV-infected intravenous
drug users was originally estimated to be 6% (Table 2) (Lemp et
al., 1990; Blattner, 1991; Goudsmit, 1992). More recent studies
have concluded that the annual AIDS risk of intravenous drug users
is about 4% (Table 2) (Rezza et al., 1990; Munoz et al.,
1992).
These findings
argue against a sexually transmitted cause, because sexual transmission
predicts a much higher AIDS risk for homosexuals with hundreds of
sexual partners than for intravenous drug users (Section 4) (Weyer
and Eggers, 1990; Eggers and Weyer, 1991). Indeed, numerous controlled
studies have indicated that the morbidity and mortality of intravenous
drug users is independent of HIV (Sections 4.4, 4.5 and 4.7). On
the basis of such studies it is proposed that the lifetime dose
of drug consumption determines the annual AIDS risk of intravenous
drug users (Section 4).
3.4.4.5.
HIV-positive hemophiliacs. The hemophiliacs provide the most
accessible group to test the virus hypothesis, because the time
of infection can be estimated and because the role of other health
risks can be controlled by studying HIV-free hemophiliacs.
About 15,000,
or 75% of the 20,000 American hemophiliacs have HIV from transfusions
received before the "AIDS test" was developed in 1984
(Tsoukas et al., 1984; Hardy et al., 1985; Institute
of Medicine, 1986, 1988; Stehr-Green et al., 1988; Goedert
et al., 1989; Koerper, 1989). Based on limited data and antibodies
against selected viral antigens, it is generally estimated that
most of these infections occurred between 1978 and 1984 (Evatt et
al., 1985; Johnson et al., 1985; McGrady et al.,
1987; Goedert et al., 1989). This high rate of infection
reflects the practice, developed in the 1960s and 1970s, of preparing
factor VIII from blood pools collected from large numbers of donors
(Johnson et al., 1985; Aronson, 1988; Koerper, 1989). Since
only about 300 of the 15,000 HIV-infected American hemophiliacs
have developed AIDS annually over the last 5 years (Morgan et
al., 1990; Centers for Disease Control, 1992a,b), the annual
AIDS risk of HIV-infected American hemophiliacs is about 2% (Table
2). Data from Germany extend these results: about 50% of the 6000
German hemophiliacs are HIV-positive (Koerper, 1989), and only 37
(1%) of these developed AIDS-defining diseases during 1991 and 303
(1% annually) from 1982 until 1991 (Bundesgesundheitsamt (Germany),
1991; Leonhard, 1992). An international study estimated the annual
AIDS risk of adult hemophiliacs at 3% and that of children at 1%
over a 5-year period of HIV-infection (Biggar and the International
Registry of Seroconverters, 1990).
According
to the virus-AIDS hypothesis, one would have expected that by now
(about one 10-year-HIV-latent-period after infection) at least 50%
of the 15,000 HIV-positive American hemophiliacs would have developed
AIDS or died from AIDS. But the 2% annual AIDS risk indicates that
the average HIV-positive hemophiliac would have to wait for 25 years
to develop AIDS diseases from HIV, which is the same as their current
median age. The median age of American hemophiliacs has increased
from 11 years in 1972, to 20 years in 1982 and to over 25 years
in 1986, despite the infiltration of HIV in 75% (Johnson et al.,
1985; Institute of Medicine, 1986; Koerper, 1989). Thus, one could
make a logical argument that HIV, instead of decreasing the lifespan
of hemophiliacs, has in fact increased it.
Considering
the compromised health of many hemophiliacs compared to the general
population, it is also surprising, that the 1-2% annual AIDS risk
of HIV-infected hemophiliacs is lower than the 3-4% risk of the
average HIV-infected, nonhemophilic European or American (Table
1). There is even a bigger discrepancy between the annual AIDS risks
of hemophiliacs and those of intravenous drug users and male homosexuals,
which are both about 4-6% (Table 2). In an effort to reconcile the
relatively low annual AIDS risks of hemophiliacs with that of homosexuals,
the hematologists Sullivan et al. (1986) noted "The
reasons for this difference remain unclear." And Biggar and
colleagues (1990) noted that "AIDS incubation ... was significantly
faster" for drug users and homosexuals than for hemophiliacs.
In view of
the many claims that HIV causes AIDS in hemophiliacs, it is even
more surprising that there is not even one controlled study from
any country showing that the morbidity or mortality of HIV-positive
hemophiliacs is higher than that of HIV-negative controls.
Instead, controlled
studies show that immunodeficiency in hemophiliacs is independent
of HIV, and that the lifetime dosage of transfusions is the cause
of AIDS-defining diseases of hemophiliacs. Studies describing immunodeficiency
in HIV-free hemophiliacs are summarized in Table 3 (Tsoukas et
al., 1984; AIDS Hemophilia French Study Group, 1985; Ludlam
et al., 1985; Gill et al., 1986; Kreiss et al.,
1986; Madhok et al., 1986; Sullivan et al., 1986;
Sharp et al., 1987; Matheson et al., 1987; Antonaci
et al., 1988; Mahir et al., 1988; Aledort, 1988; Jin
et al., 1989; Jason et al., 1990; Lang, et al.,
1989; Becherer et al., 1990). One of these studies even
documents an AIDS-defining disease in an HIV-free hemophiliac (Kreiss
et al., 1986). Immunodeficiency in these studies is typically
defined by a T4 to T8-cell ratio of about 1 or less than 1, compared
to a normal ratio of 2.
Most of the
studies listed in Table 3 and additional ones conducted before HIV
had been discovered have concluded or noted that immunodeficiency
is directly proportional to the number of transfusions received
over a lifetime (Menitove et al., 1983; Kreiss et al.,
1984; Johnson et al., 1985; Hardy et al., 1985; Pollack
et al., 1985; Prince, 1992; Ludlum et al., 1985; Gill
et al., 1986). According to the hematologists Pollack et
al. (1985) "derangement of immune function in hemophiliacs
results from transfusion of foreign proteins or a ubiquitous virus
rather than contracting AIDS infectious agent." The "ubiquitous
virus" was a reference to the virus-AIDS hypothesis but a rejection
of HIV, because in 1985 HIV was extremely rare in blood concentrates
outside the U.S., but immunodeficiency was observed in Israeli,
Scottish and American hemophiliacs (Pollack et al., 1985).
Madhok et al. also arrived at the conclusion that "clotting
factor concentrate impairs the cell mediated immune response to
a new antigen in the absence of infection with HIV" (Madhok
et al., 1986). Aledort observed that "chronic recipients
... of factor VIII, factor IX and pooled products ... demonstrated
significant T-cell abnormalities regardless of the presence of HIV
antibody" (Aledort, 1988). Even those who claim that clotting
factor does not cause immunodeficiency show that immunodeficiency
in hemophiliacs increases with both the age and the cumulative dose
of clotting factor received during a lifetime (Becherer et al.,
1990).
One controlled
study showed directly that protein impurities of commercial factor
VIII, rather than factor VIII or HIV, were immunosuppressive among
factor VIII-treated, HIV-positive hemophiliacs. Over a period of
two years the T-cells of HIV-positive hemophiliacs treated with
commercial factor VIII declined two-fold, while those of matched
HIV-positive controls treated with purified factor VIII remained
unchanged (Table 3) (de Biasi et al., 1991).
Before AIDS,
a multicenter study investigating the immune systems of 1551 hemophiliacs
treated with factor VIII from 1975 to 1979 documented lymphocytopenia
in 9.3% and thrombocytopenia in 5% (Eyster et al., 1985).
Accordingly, AIDS-defining opportunistic infections, including 60%
pneumonias and 20% tuberculosis, have been recorded in hemophiliacs
between 1968 and 1979 (Johnson et al., 1985). These transfusion-acquired
immunodeficiencies could more than account for the 2% annual incidence
of AIDS-defining diseases in HIV-positive hemophiliacs recorded
now (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b). An American hematologist
who recorded opportunistic infections in hemophiliacs occurring
between 1968 and 1979, including 2 candidiasis and 66 pneumonia
deaths, commented in 1983 "... it seems possible that many
of the unspecified pneumonias in hemophiliacs in the past would
be classified today as AIDS" (Aronson, 1983).
It follows
that long-term transfusion of foreign proteins causes immunodeficiency
in hemophiliacs with or without HIV. The virus hypothesis has simply
claimed normal morbidity and mortality of hemophiliacs for HIV,
by ignoring HIV-free controls.
Nevertheless
several investigators comparing HIV-negative to HIV-positive hemophiliacs
have noted that immunodeficiency is more often associated with HIV-positives
(Table 3), and have observed that HIV correlates with the number
of transfusions received (Tsoukas et al., 1984; Kreiss et
al., 1986; Sullivan et al., 1986; Koerper, 1989; Becherer
et al., 1990). According to Kreiss et al. "seropositive
hemophiliac subjects, on average, had been exposed to twice as much
concentrate ... as seronegative[s]" (Kreiss et al.,
1986). And according to Goedert et al. "the prevalence
of HIV-1 antibodies was directly associated with the degree of severity
(of hemophilia)" (Goedert et al., 1989). Thus HIV appears
just to be a marker of the multiplicity of transfusions, rather
than a cause of immunodeficiency.
The conclusion
that long-term transfusion of foreign proteins causes immunodeficiency
makes three testable predictions:
(1) It predicts
that hemophiliacs with "AIDS" would be older than average
hemophiliacs. Indeed, the median age of hemophiliacs with AIDS in
the U.S. (Evatt et al., 1984; Koerper, 1989; Stehr-Green
et al., 1989), England (Darby et al., 1989) and other
countries (Biggar and the International Registry of Seroconverters,
1990; Blattner, 1991) is significantly higher (about 34 years in
the U.S.; Johnson et al., 1985; Koerper, 1989; Becherer et
al., 1990) than the average age of hemophiliacs (20-25 years
in the U.S., see above). Goedert et al. reported that the
annual AIDS risk of 1- to 17-year-old hemophiliacs was 1.5%, that
of 18- to 34-year-old hemophiliacs was 3% and that of 64-year-old
hemophiliacs was 5% (Goedert et al., 1989). This confirms
that the cumulative dose of transfusions received is the cause of
AIDS-defining diseases among hemophiliacs. According to the hematologist
Koerper, "this may reflect lifetime exposure to a greater number
of units of concentrate, ..." and to Evatt et al., "This
age bias may be due to differences in duration of exposure to blood
products ..." (Evatt et al., 1984; Koerper, 1989).
By contrast,
AIDS caused by an autonomous infectious pathogen would be largely
independent of the age of the recipient. Even if HIV were that pathogen,
the hemophiliac population with AIDS should have the same age distribution
as the hemophiliac population over 10 years, because HIV is thought
to take 10 years to cause AIDS and nearly all hemophiliacs were
infected about 10 years ago (Johnson et al., 1985; McGrady
et al., 1987; Koerper, 1989).
(2) Foreign
protein-mediated immunodeficiency further predicts that all AIDS
diseases of hemophiliacs are opportunistic infections. If hemophilia
AIDS were due to HIV only 62% of their AIDS diseases would be opportunistic
infections, because 38% of all American AIDS patients have diseases,
that are not dependent on, and not consistently associated with,
immunodeficiency (Table 1, Section 3.5.8). These include wasting
disease (19%), Kaposi's sarcoma (10%), dementia (6%) and lymphoma
(3%) (Table 1).
The AIDS pathology
of hemophiliacs confirms the prediction of the foreign protein-hypothesis
exactly. In America 99% of the hemophiliacs with AIDS have opportunistic
infections, of which about 70% are fungal and viral pneumonias,
and less than 1% have Kaposi's sarcoma (Evatt et al., 1984;
Selik et al., 1987; Stehr-Green et al., 1988; Goedert
et al., 1989; Koerper, 1989; Becherer et al., 1990).
The small percentage of Kaposi's sarcoma is due to the nitrite inhalants
used by male homosexual hemophiliacs as sexual stimulants (Section
4). There are no reports of wasting disease and dementia in hemophiliacs.
(3) If hemophilia
AIDS is due to transfusion of foreign proteins, the wives of hemophiliacs
should not contract AIDS from their mates. But if it were due to
a parenterally or sexually transmitted virus, hemophilia AIDS would
be sexually transmissible. Indeed, AIDS researchers claim that the
wives of hemophiliacs develop AIDS from sexual transmission of HIV
(Lawrence et al., 1990; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990; Centers for
Disease Control, 1992b). For example AIDS researcher Fauci asks:
"How about the 60-year-old wife of a hemophiliac who gets infected?
Is she cruising, too?" (Booth, 1988).
However, (a)
statistical scrutiny and (b) a controlled study unconfirm the hypothesis
that hemophilia AIDS is sexually transmissible: (a) The CDC reports
that 94 wives of hemophiliacs have been diagnosed with unnamed AIDS
diseases since 1985 (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b). If one
considers that there have been 15,000 HIV-positive hemophiliacs
in the U.S. since 1985 and assumes that a third are married, then
there are 5000 wives of HIV-positive hemophiliacs. About 13 of these
women have developed AIDS annually during the 7 years (94:7) from
1985 to 1991 (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b). By contrast,
at least 80 of these women would be expected to die per year, considering
the human lifespan of about 80 years and that on average at least
1.6% of all those over 20 years of age die annually. Thus, until
controls show that among 5000 HIV-negative wives of hemophiliacs
only 67 (80-13) die annually, the claim that wives of hemophilics
die from sexual transmission of HIV is unfounded speculation.
Moreover,
it has been pointed out that all AIDS-defining diseases of the wives
of hemophiliacs are typically age-related opportunistic infections,
including 81% pneumonia (Lawrence et al., 1990). Kaposi's
sarcoma, dementia, lymphoma and wasting syndrome are not observed
in wives of hemophiliacs (Lawrence et al., 1990). Thus the
virus-AIDS hypothesis seems to claim, once more, normal morbidity
and mortality of the wives of hemophiliacs for HIV.
(b) To test
the hypothesis that immunodeficiency of hemophiliacs is sexually
transmissible the T4 to T8 cell-ratio of 41 spouses and female sexual
partners of immunodeficient hemophiliacs were analyzed (Kreiss et
al., 1984). Twenty-two of the females had relationships with
hemophiliacs with T-cell ratios below 1 and 19 with hemophiliacs
with ratios of 1 and greater. The mean duration of relationships
was 10 years, the mean number of sexual contacts was 111 during
the previous year, and only 12% had used condoms (Kreiss et al.,
1984). Since the T-cell ratios of all spouses were normal, averaging
1.68-exactly like those of 57 normal controls, the authors concluded
that "there is no evidence to date for heterosexual or household-contact
transmission of T-cell subset abnormalities from hemophiliacs to
their spouses ..." (Kreiss et al., 1984).
It follows
that the foreign protein-hypothesis, but not the HIV-hypothesis,
correctly predicts (1) the pathology, (2) the age bias, (3) the
noncontagiousness of hemophilia AIDS and (4) HIV-free immunodeficiency
in hemophiliacs. It also explains the discrepancies between the
annual AIDS risks of hemophiliacs and other risk groups (Table 2).
Since the
virus hypothesis has become totally dominant in 1988, no new studies
have described HIV-free immunodeficient hemophiliacs (Table 3) and
the question whether HIV-free immunodeficient hemophiliacs ever
developed AIDS-defining diseases became a taboo. The study by Jason
et al. described data collected in the mid 1980s, the studies
by Jin et al. and Becherer et al. collected data before
1988 and the one by de Biasi et al. compared the effects
of purified to unpurified factor VIII only in HIV-positive hemophiliacs
(Table 3).
In response
to the argument that hemophiliacs only began to develop AIDS diseases
when HIV appeared (Centers for Disease Control, 1986; Oppenheimer,
1992), it is proposed that "new" AIDS-defining diseases
among hemophiliacs are an indirect consequence of extending their
life with factor VIII treatment. Long-term treatment with factor
VIII has prolonged the median life of hemophiliacs from 11 in 1972
to 25 in 1986. But contaminating foreign proteins received over
periods of 10 years of treatment have also caused immunodeficiencies,
and various viral and microbial contaminants have caused infections
in some, and HIV infection in 75%. HIV has been a marker for the
number of transfusions and factor VIII treatments received, just
like hepatitis virus infection was a marker of the number of transfusions
received until it was eliminated from the blood supplies (Anonymous,
1984; Koerper, 1989). Prior to factor VIII therapy most hemophiliacs
died as adolescents from internal bleeding (Koerper, 1989).
3.4.4.6.
HIV-positive teenagers. The annual AIDS risk of HIV-infected
American teenagers can be calculated as follows: There are about
30 million American teenagers, of which 0.03% (10,000) (Burke et
al., 1990) to 0.3% (100,000) (St Louis et al., 1991)
are HIV-positive. Since only 160 developed AIDS in 1991 and only
170 in 1990 (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b), their annual AIDS
risk is between 0.16% and 1.7% (Table 2).
Thus the AIDS
risk of teenagers with HIV is less than the national average of
3-4%. There are no statistics to indicate that the annual risk for
AIDS-defining diseases of the HIV-infected teenage population is
higher than that of HIV-free controls (Section 3.5.2). Since most
American teenagers with AIDS are either hemophiliacs (38%), intravenous
drug users (25%) or male homosexuals (25%) (Section 2.1.3), it is
proposed that the associated risk factors, rather than HIV, are
the cause of teenage AIDS (Sections 3.4.4.5 and 4).
3.4.4.7.
HIV-positive general U.S. population. The CDC reports that
3% of all American AIDS cases are from the general population, corresponding
to 900-1200 of the 30,000~40,000 annual AIDS cases (Table 1) (Centers
for Disease Control, 1992b). Since at least 0.03% to 0.3%, or 80,000
to 800,000, of the general American population of 250 million are
infected (Section 3.5.2) (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
1990; Burke et al., 1990; Morgan et al., 1990; St
Louis et al., 1991), the annual AIDS risk of the general
population must be between 0.1% and 1% (Table 2). Thus the annual
AIDS risk of HIV-infected Americans of the general population is
similar to that of teenagers.
There are
no statistics to indicate that the annual AIDS risk of the general
HIV-infected population is higher than the annual risk for AIDS-defining
diseases in HIV-free controls. Because the incidence of AIDS in
the general population is exceedingly low, it is proposed again
that it reflects the normal, low incidence of AIDS-defining diseases,
rather than HIV-mediated diseases.
3.4.4.8.
HIV-positive Africans. The annual AIDS risks of HIV-infected
Africans is only 0.3% (Tables 1 and 2), because 6 million HIV carriers
generated 129,000 AIDS cases from 1985 to the end of 1991 (Table
1). There are no controlled studies indicating that the risk for
AIDS-defining diseases of HIV-infected Africans differs from that
of HIV-negative controls.
Since the
annual AIDS risk of HIV-infected Africans is (1) 10-times lower
than the average American and European risk, (2) up to 100-fold
less than that of American/European risk groups, (3) the same for
both sexes unlike that in America and Europe and (4) very low considering
that the annual mortality in Africa is around 2% and that AIDS includes
the most common African diseases, it is proposed that African AIDS
is just a new name for indigenous African diseases (Section 2.1.2).
Instead of
a new virus, malnutrition, parasitic infections and poor sanitary
conditions have all been proposed as causes of African AIDS-defining
diseases (Editorial, 1987; KonoteyAhulu, 1987, 1989; Rappoport,
1988; Adams, 1989). Further, it has been proposed that the incidence
of tuberculosis, diarrhea, fever and other African AIDS-defining
diseases may be the same in Africans with and without HIV (Editorial,
1987). And prior to the discovery of HIV, protein malnutrition was
identified by the AIDS researchers Fauci et al. as the world's
leading cause of immunodeficiency, particularly in underdeveloped
countries (Seligmann et al., 1984).
Indeed, recent
studies document that only 2168 out of 4383 (49.5%) African AIDS
patients with slim disease, tuberculosis and other Africa-specific
diseases, who all met the WHO definition of AIDS, were infected
by HIV. These patients were from Abidjan, Ivory Coast (De Cock et
al., 1991; Taelman et al., 1991), Lusaka, Zambia and
Kinshasa, Zaire (Taelman et al., 1991). Another study reports
135 (59%) HIV-free AIDS patients from Ghana out of 227 diagnosed
by clinical criteria of the WHO. These patients suffered from weight
loss, diarrhea, chronic fever, tuberculosis and neurological diseases
(Hishida et al., 1992). An earlier study documents 116 HIV-negatives
among 424 African patients that meet the WHO definition of AIDS
(Widy-Wirski et al., 1988). According to an African AIDS
doctor, "Today, because of AIDS, it seems that Africans are
not allowed to die from these conditions any longer" (Konotey-Ahulu,
1987). Another asks "What use is a clinical case definition
for AIDS in Africa?" (Gilks, 1991).
The 10-fold
difference between the average annual AIDS risks of Africans and
Americans/ Europeans (Table 1) can thus be resolved as follows:
(1) The high AIDS risk of HIV-positive Americans and Europeans is
the product of the low absolute numbers of HIV carriers in the U.S.
and Europe compared to Africa (Table 1) and of the concentration
of HIV in AIDS risks groups, e.g. consumers of recreational drugs
and the antiviral drug AZT (Section 4) and recipients of transfusions
(Section 3.4.3). (2) The low AIDS risk of Africans is a product
of large absolute numbers of HIV carriers and their relatively low,
spontaneous and malnutrition-mediated AIDS risks.
3.4.4.9.
HIV-positive Thais. Given that there have been only 123 Thai
AIDS cases in the last 1-2 years and an estimated 300,000 HIV carriers
in Thailand (Weniger et al., 1991), the annual AIDS risk
of HIV-infected Thais can be calculated to be less than 0.05% (Table
2). Since most of these 123 were either intravenous drug users or
"sex workers" (Section 2.1.3), it is proposed that these
specific health risks are their cause of AIDS (Section 4), rather
than the HIV that they share, unspecifically, with 300,000 healthy
Thais.
The over 100-fold
range in the annual AIDS risks of different AIDS risks groups, summarized
in Table 2, clearly indicates that HIV is not sufficient to cause
AIDS. It confirms and extends an earlier CDC conclusion: "The
magnitude of some of the differences in rates is so great that even
gross errors in denominator estimates can be overcome" (Hardy
et al., 1985). Moreover, analysis of the specific health
risks of each risk group has identified nonviral health risks that
are necessary and sufficient causes of AIDS (Table 3 and Section
4.5).
3.4.5. Specific
AIDS Diseases Predetermined by Prior Health Risks
If HIV were
the cause of AIDS, every AIDS case should have the same risk of
having one or more of the 25 AIDS diseases. However, the data listed
above (Section 2.1) and in Table 2 indicate that per AIDS case different
risk groups have very specific AIDS diseases:
(1) Male homosexuals
have 20 times more Kaposi's sarcoma than all other American and
European AIDS risk groups.
(2) Hemophiliacs
and other recipients of transfusions have fungal and viral pneumonia
and other opportunistic infections, and practically no Kaposi's
sarcoma or dementia.
(3) The AIDS
diseases of the "general population" are either spontaneous,
hemophilia- or age-related opportunistic infections. Typical examples
are cited below (Section 3.5.16).
(4) Babies
exclusively have bacterial infections (18%) and a high rate of dementia
(14%), compared to adults (6%) (Table l).
(5) Africans
develop Africa-specific AIDS diseases 10 times more and Kaposi's
sarcoma 10 times less often than Americans or Europeans.
The epidemiological
data summarized in Section 3.4 indicate that HIV is sufficient to
determine neither the annual AIDS risk, nor the type of AIDS disease
an infected person may develop. Instead, prior health risks including
drug consumption, malnutrition and congenital diseases like hemophilia
and their treatments and even the country of residence, predetermine
AIDS diseases. The correlations between HIV and AIDS that are claimed
to support the virus-AIDS hypothesis are not direct, not complete,
not distinctive and, above all, not controlled. Controlled studies
indicate that the incidence of AIDS-defining diseases in intravenous
drug users, male homosexuals practicing risk behavior and hemophiliacs
is independent of HIV.
Therefore,
it is proposed that various group-specific health risk factors,
including recreational and antiviral drugs (Section 4) and malnutrition,
are necessary and sufficient causes of AIDS. The existence of risk
group-specific AIDS-defining diseases in the absence of HIV confirms
this conclusion (Sections 3.4.4 and 4.5). 3.5.
Assumptions and Anecdotal Cases that Appear
to Support the Virus-AIDS Hypothesis
The following
assumptions and anecdotal cases are frequently claimed to prove
the virus-AIDS hypothesis. Despite the popularity 0f these claims
they are either uncontrolled for alternative explanations or they
are natural coincidences between HIV infection and naturally-occurring
diseases.
3.5.1. HIV
is Presumed New Because AIDS is New
HIV is presumed
new in all countries with AIDS, because AIDS is new (Blattner et
al., 1988; Gallo and Montagnier, 1988; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990).
The presumed newness of HIV is used as a primary argument for the
virus-AIDS hypothesis: ... the time of occurrence of AIDS in each
country is correlated with the time of introduction of HIV into
that country; first HIV is introduced, then AIDS appears" (Blattner
et al., 1988) or: "In every country and city where AIDS
has appeared, HIV infection preceded it just by a few years"
(Weiss and Jaffe, 1990).
However, according
to Farr's law, the age of a microbe in a population is determined
by changes in its incidence over time (Bregman and Langmuir, 1990).
If a microbe is spreading from a low to a high incidence it is new;
however, if its incidence in a population is constant, it is old
(Fig. 1) (Freeman, 1979; Duesberg, 1991a). Figure 1 shows the incidences
of long established microbes in the U.S. population, i.e. Candida
and Pneumocystis each at about 100% (Freeman, 1979; Pifer,
1984; Williford Pifer et al., 1988), and cytomegalovirus
and herpes virus at about 50% and 40%, respectively (Evans, 1989c).
In addition, it shows the typical exponential rise and subsequent
fall of a hypothetical epidemic by a new influenza virus strain
(Freeman, 1979).
Ever since
antibodies against HIV were first detected by the "AIDS test"
in 1985, the number of antibody-positive Americans has been fixed
at a constant population of 1 million, or 0.4% (Section 2.2. and
Table 1). The U.S. Army also reports that from 1985 to 1990 an unchanging
0.03% of male and female applicants have been HIV-positive (Burke
et al., 1990). This is the predicted distribution of a long
established virus (Fig. 1 ). Since there are over 250 million uninfected
Americans, and since there is no antiviral vaccine or drug to stop
the spread of HIV, the non-spread of HIV in the U.S. in the last
7 years is an infallible indication that the American "HIV
epidemic" is old. The Central African HIV epidemic has also
remained fixed at about 10% of the population since 1985 (Section
2.2). Likewise, HIV has remained fixed at 500,000 Europeans since
1988 (World Health Organization, 1992a). The non-spread of HIV confirms
exactly the conclusion reached below that HIV behaves in a population
as a quasi-genetic marker (Section 3.5.2). Hence, the assumption
that HIV is new in the U.S. or in Africa is erroneous.
Indeed HIV
existed in the U.S. long before its fictitious origin in Africa
(Gallo, 1987; Gallo and Montagnier, 1988; Anderson and May, 1992)
and its fictitious entry into this country in the 1970s (Shilts,
1987). For example, in the U.S. in 1968 an HIV-positive, male homosexual
prostitute died from Kaposi's sarcoma and immunodeficiency (Garry
et al., 1988), and 45 out of 1129 American intravenous drug
users were found to be HIV-positive in 1971 and 1972 (Moore et
al., 1986).
The putative
novelty of HIV is an anthropocentric interpretation of new technology
that made it possible to discover HIV and many other latent retroviruses
like HTLV-I (Duesberg and Schwartz, 1992). Indeed, the technology
to detect a latent virus like HIV only became available around the
time AIDS appeared. Given a new virus-scope, the assertion that
HIV is new is just like claiming the appearance of "new"
stars with a new telescope. Thus the claims that "... first
HIV is introduced, then AIDS appears" (Blattner et al.,
1988) and that "HIV ... preceded it (AIDS)" (Weiss and
Jaffe, 1990) are ironically more true than the proponents of the
virus hypothesis had anticipated. HIV preceded AIDS by many, perhaps
millions, of years.
3.5.2. HIV-Assumed
to be Sexually Transmitted-Depends on Perinatal Transmission for
Survival
AIDS is said
to be a sexually transmitted disease, because HIV is thought to
be a sexually transmitted virus (Section 2.2). However, HIV is not
by nature a sexually transmitted virus. Sexual transmission of HIV
is extremely inefficient. Based on studies measuring heterosexual
and homosexual transmission, it depends on an average of 1000 heterosexual
contacts and 100-500 homosexual contacts with antibody-positive
people (Rosenberg and Weiner, 1988; Lawrence et al., 1990;
Blattner, 1991; Hearst and Hulley, 1988; Peterman et al.,
1988). According to Rosenberg and Weiner, "HIV infection in
non-drug using prostitutes tends to be low or absent, implying that
sexual activity alone does not place them at high risk" (Rosenberg
and Weiner, 1988). Moreover, unwanted pregnancies and venereal diseases,
but not HIV infections, have increased significantly in the U.S.
since HIV has been known (Institute of Medicine, 1988; Aral and
Holmes, 1991). This argues directly against sexual transmission
of HIV.
Sexual transmission
is so inefficient because there is no free, non-neutralized HIV
anywhere in antibody-positive persons, particularly not in semen
(Section 3.3). In a group of 25 antibody-positive men, only one
single provirus of HIV could be found in over 1 million cells of
semen in one of the men and no HIV at all was found in the semen
of the other 24 (Van Voorhis et al., 1991). Likewise, HIV
could only be isolated or reactivated from ejaculates of 9 out of
95 antibody-positive men by cocultivation with 2 million phytohemagglutinin-activated
leukocytes (Anderson et al., 1992). No virus or microbe could
survive if it depended on a transmission strategy that is as inefficient
as 1 in 1000 contacts.
Indeed, HIV
depends on perinatal, instead of sexual, transmission for survival-just
like other animal and human retroviruses. Therefore, the efficiency
of perinatal transmission must be high. This appears to be the case.
Based on HIV-tracking via the "AIDS test," perinatal transmission
from the mother is estimated to be 13-50% efficient (Blattner et
al., 1988; Blattner, 1991; Duesberg, 1991a; Institute of Medicine,
1988; European Collaborative Study, 1991). This number does not
include paternal HIV transmission to the baby via semen, for which
there are currently no data. The real efficiency of perinatal transmission
must be higher than the antibody-tests suggest, because in a fraction
of recipients HIV only becomes immunogenic when its hosts are of
an advanced age (Quinn et al., 1986; St Louis et al.,
1991). During the antibody-negative phase, latent HIV can be detected
by the polymerase chain reaction (Rogers et al., 1989, European
Collaborative Study, 1991). This is also true for other perinatally
transmitted human (Blattner, 1990; Duesberg, 1991a) and animal retroviruses
(Rowe, 1973; Duesberg, 1987).
HIV survival
via perinatal transmission leads to two predictions: (1) HIV cannot
be inherently pathogenic-just like all other perinatally transmitted
viruses and microbes (Freeman, 1979; Mims and White, 1984). No
microbe-host system could survive if the microbe were perinatally
transmitted and at once fatal. (2) HIV must function as a quasi-genetic
marker, because it is quasi-nontransmissible by sex, or other
natural horizontal modes of transmission, just like known murine
retrovirus prototypes (Rowe, 1973; Duesberg, 1987). Both predictions
are confirmed:
(1) Overwhelming
statistical evidence from the U.S. and Africa documents that the
risk for AIDS-defining diseases for HIV-positive babies, in the
absence of other risk factors (Sections 3.4.4 and 4), is the same
as that of HIV-free controls:
(a) "AIDS
tests" from applicants to the U.S. Army and the U.S. Job Corps
indicate that between 0.03% (Burke et al., 1990) and 0.3%
(St Louis et al., 1991) of the 17- to 19-year-old applicants
are HIV-infected but healthy. Since there are about 90 million Americans
under the age of 20, there must be between 27,000 and 270,000 (0.03%-0.3%
of 90 million) HIV carriers. In Central Africa there are even more,
since 1-2% of healthy children are HIV-positive (Quinn et al.,
1986).
Most, if not
all, of these adolescents must have acquired HIV from perinatal
infection for the following reasons: sexual transmission of HIV
depends on an average of 1000 sexual contacts, and only 1 in 250
Americans carries HIV (Table 1). Thus, all positive teenagers would
have had to achieve an absurd 1000 contacts with a positive partner,
or an even more absurd 250,000 sexual contacts with random Americans
to acquire HIV by sexual transmission. It follows that probably
all of the healthy adolescent HIV carriers were perinatally infected,
as for example the 22-year-old Kimberly Bergalis (Section 3.5.16).
The AIDS risk
of perinatally infected babies of the general population can be
estimated as follows. Between 27,000 and 270,000 Americans under
the age of 20 carry HIV. But only about 4260 AIDS cases have been
recorded in this age group in the last 10 years (Centers for Disease
Control, 1992b). Therefore, between 85% and 98% of HIV-infected
youths do not develop AIDS up to 20 years after perinatal infection
(Section 2.1). Since the above number includes the AIDS babies from
drug-addicted mothers (Sections 3.4.2 and 4), the AIDS risk of HIV-infected
babies from mothers that don't use drugs probably reflects normal
infant mortality.
(b) A controlled
study from Africa compared 218 newborns from HIV-positive mothers
to 218 from HIV-negative mothers, and the "rates of prematurity,
low birth weight, congenital malformations and neonatal mortality
were comparable in the two groups" (Lepage et al., 1991).
The mothers were matched for age and parity and the "frequency
of signs and symptoms was not statistically different in the two
groups."
(2) The incidence
of HIV in American teenagers of different ethnic backgrounds is
predictable on genetic grounds. It is about 10-fold higher in blacks
than in whites, i.e. 0.3% compared to 0.03% (U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, 1990; Burke et al., 1990; Blattner,
1991; Palca, 1991b; St Louis et al., 1991; Vermund, 1991).
HIV was even 50-fold more common in black mothers in inner-city
hospitals in New York (36%) than in whites (0.7%) (Landesmann et
al., 1987). This reflects the 25- to 50-fold higher incidence
of HIV in the blacks' African ancestors (10%) compared to the whites'
European ancestors (0.2 to 0.4%) (Section 2.2, Table 1). Likewise,
the different ethnic groups of the Caribbean reflect the distinct
HTLV-I incidences of their ancestors in Africa, Europe and Japan,
despite generations of coexistence on the Caribbean islands (Blattner,
1990). The unchanging incidence of HIV in the American population
(Fig. 1) also confirms the view that HIV is a quasi-genetic marker.
Since there is virtually no horizontal transmission of retroviruses,
murine retroviruses have functioned as classical genetic markers
of mice that could only be distinguished from cellular genes by
fastidious genetic crosses (Rowe, 1973).
Thus the assumption
that AIDS is sexually transmitted by HIV is not consistent with
the natural perinatal mode of HIV transmission. If natural transmission
of HIV caused a disease, AIDS would be a pediatric disease. Instead,
HIV is merely a marker of either an average of 1000 sexual contacts
and thus of many other possible AIDS risks associated with very
high sexual activity or of long-term intravenous drug use (Sections
3.4.3 and 5).
3.5.3. AIDS
Assumed to be Proportional to HIV Infection
The incidence
of AIDS is assumed to be proportional to the incidence of HIV via
a constant factor. For example, a 10-fold higher incidence of AIDS
in American and European males compared to females is assumed to
reflect a 10-fold higher incidence of HIV in men (Blattner et
al., 1988; Blattner, 1991; Goudsmit, 1992).
However, there
is no evidence that the incidence of HIV is 10 times higher in males
than in females of the general American and European population,
although this is the case for AIDS (Table l). Indeed, the most recent
claim for a 90% bias of HIV for males of the general population
(Blattner, 1991) is only supported by a reference to an editorial
(Palca, 1991b), which itself provides nothing more than an unreferenced
cartoon showing global patterns of HIV infection. According to a
CDC epidemiologist, estimates of how HIV is distributed between
the sexes of the general population are "approximations"
based on the distribution of AIDS (Tim Dondero, CDC, personal communication;
see also Anderson and May, 1992)-a tautology.
Proportionality
between HIV and AIDS via a constant is also incompatible with the
following statistics. The U.S. Army (Burke et al., 1990)
and the U.S. Job Corps (St Louis et al., 1991) report, based
on millions of tests, that HIV has been equally distributed between
the sexes among 17- to 21-year-olds of the general population over
the last five years for which data were available (Sections 3.5.1
and 3.5.2). Since testing 17- to 19-year-olds annually for 5 years
is equivalent to testing 17- to 24-year-olds, the U.S. Army data
predict that among 17- to 24-year-olds, AIDS risks should be distributed
equally between the sexes. However, the CDC documents that 85% of
the AIDS cases among 17- to 24-year-olds were males (Centers for
Disease Control, 1992b).
In response
to this, some proponents of the virus-AIDS hypothesis have speculated
that teenage homosexuals exclude themselves from the Army. However,
Randy Shilts, a homosexual writer, reports that just the opposite
is true (Shilts, 1991). Moreover, most teenagers are not as yet
aware of a definite homosexual persuasion and are not likely to
understand the implications nor to fear the consequences of a positive
"AIDS test."
The over 100-fold
discrepancies between the AIDS risks of different HIV-infected risk
groups also disprove the claim that the incidence of AIDS is proportional
via a constant to the incidence of HIV (Table 2). The proportionality
between HIV and AIDS only holds if the analysis is restricted to
groups with the same AIDS risks. In groups with the same percentage
of HIV but with different AIDS risks, AIDS segregates specifically
with nonviral AIDS risks, e.g. illicit recreational drugs, the antiviral
drug AZT (Section 4) and frequent transfusions (Section 3.4.4).
3.5.4. AIDS
Assumed to be Homosexually Transmitted
in the U.S. and Europe
In view of
a sexually transmitted AIDS virus, it is paradoxical that AIDS is
90% male in America and 86% male in Europe (Sections 3.1 and 3.2).
Therefore it is assumed that "the virus first got its footing
in the U.S." in male homosexuals (Booth, 1988) and has remained
with homosexuals because it is transmitted preferentially by anal
intercourse and because homosexuals have no sex with heterosexuals
(Centers for Disease Control, 1986; Shilts, 1987; Blatter et
al., 1988; Institute of Medicine, 1988; Blattner, 1991; Bardach,
1992; Project Inform, 1992).
However, this
assumption is inconsistent with the fact that about 10% of all males
and females prefer anal intercourse (Bolling and Voeller, 1987;
Turner et al., 1989) and that American and European heterosexuals
have sufficient access to HIV. The females would be infected by
HIV-positive, heterosexual intravenous drug users, hemophiliacs,
and bisexual males. Thus, if HIV were transmitted by anal intercourse,
about the same percentage of women as men should develop AIDS, particularly
since the efficiencies of transmission of anal and vaginal intercourse
are approximately the same, e.g. between 1 to 100 and 1 to 500 for
anal and 1 to 1000 for vaginal intercourse (Blattner, 1991) (see
also Section 3.5.2). Yet, despite widespread alarm, this has not
occurred in the last 10 years in the U.S. (Table 1), although the
first women with AIDS had been diagnosed as early as in 1981 (Centers
for Disease Control, 1986; Guinan and Hardy, 1987). The risk of
women for both HIV infection and AIDS is the same for those who
practice anal intercourse as for those who practice other types
of intercourse (Guinan and Hardy, 1987).
The preferred
anal-transmission hypothesis is also incompatible with the sexually
equal distribution of HIV and AIDS in Africa. Since it is postulated
that HIV appeared in America and Africa at about the same time 10-20
years ago (Institute of Medicine, 1986; Blattner et al.,
1988; Gallo and Montagnier, 1988), HIV should have reached the same
equilibria between the sexes in all countries.
Instead it
is shown below that the male bias for AIDS in America and Europe
reflects male-specific behavior, including the facts that over 75%
of all intravenous drug users are males and that long-term consumption
of sexual stimulants, like amylnitrite and ethylchloride inhalants,
is almost entirely restricted to male homosexuals (Section 4). HIV
is just a marker of the many sexual stimulants used to achieve 500-1000
sexual contacts (Section 4). The difference between the AIDS risks
of men in America and Europe, namely drugs, and those of Africans,
namely country-specific, but not sex-specific, risk factors (Section
3.4.4.8) resolves the paradox between the different sexual distributions
of AIDS in these countries.
3.5.5. AIDS
Assumed to be Heterosexually Transmitted
by African "Life-style"
AIDS in Africa
is assumed to affect both genders equally, because HIV is distributed
equally between the sexes by "prostitution" (Institute
of Medicine, 1988), lack of "circumcision" (Klein, 1988;
Marx, 1989; Blattner, 1991), African "lifestyle" (Quinn
et al., 1987; Blattner et al., 1988; Goodgame, 1990)
and "voodoo rituals" (Gallo, 1991). These assumptions
are compatible with the sexually equal distributions of HIV and
AIDS in Africa.
However, AIDS
in Africa is hard to reconcile with the known efficiency of sexual
transmission of HIV. Since it takes 1000 HIV-positive sexual contacts
to transmit HIV and about 10% of all Central Africans, or 6 million,
are HIV-positive (Section 2.2), 6 million Africans would have had
to achieve on average at least 10,000 sexual contacts with random
Africans to pick up HIV. Since this is highly improbable, it is
also highly improbable that sexual transmission of HIV is the cause
of AIDS in Africa. The true reason for the sexually equal distribution
of HIV in Africa is perinatal transmission of HIV (Section 3.5.2).
Nonsexual, country-specific risk factors are the reason for the
"sexually" equal distribution of AIDS in Africa (Section
3.4.4.8).
3.5.6. HIV
Claimed to be Abundant in AIDS Cases
HIV is said
to be abundant or viremic in AIDS patients (Baltimore and Feinberg,
1989; Coombs et al., 1989; Ho et al., 1989a; Semple
et al., 1991) and thus compatible with orthodox viruses which
cause disease only at high titers (Duesberg and Schwartz, 1992).
In other words HIV is assumed to meet Koch's first postulate (Section
3.3). The assumption is based on two papers which reported HIV titers
of 102 to 103 infectious units per mL of blood in 75% of AIDS patients
and in 25-50% of asymptomatic HIV carriers (Coombs et al.,
1989; Ho et al., 1989a). The authors and an accompanying
editorial, HIV Revealed, Toward a Natural History of the Infection
(Baltimore and Feinberg, 1989), concluded that these findings established
HIV viremia as an orthodox criterion of viral pathogenicity. Viremia
of similar titers was recently also implied in some AIDS patients
and asymptomatic carriers based on an indirect assay that amplifies
HIV RNA in vitro (Semple et al., 1991).
However, several
arguments cast doubt on the claim that HIV viremia is relevant for
AIDS:
(1) Since
viremia was observed in 25-50% of asymptomatic HIV carriers (Coombs
et al., 1989; Ho et al., 1989a; Semple et al.,
1991), it cannot be sufficient for AIDS.
(2) Since
no viremia was observed in 25% of the AIDS cases studied by two
groups (Coombs et al., 1989; Ho et al., 1989a), it
is not necessary for AIDS.
(3) Viremia
initiated from a previously suppressed virus and observed years
after infection is a classical consequence, rather than the cause
of immunodeficiency. Indeed, many normally latent parasites become
activated and may cause chronic "opportunistic infections"
in immunodeficient persons, as for example Candida, Pneumocystis,
herpes virus, cytomegalovirus, hepatitis virus, tuberculosis bacillus,
toxoplasma (Sections 2.3 and 3.4.3)-and sometimes even HIV. It is
consistent with this view that HIV viremia is observed more often
in AIDS patients than in asymptomatic carriers (Duesberg, 1990c).
(4) The HIVs
that make up the "viremias" are apparently not infectious
in vivo, because only a negligible fraction of leukocytes,
on average only 1 in 1500 to 8000, of AIDS patients are infected
(Section 3.3). The probable reason is that the "viremias"
consist of viruses that are neutralized by the antiviral antibodies
of "seropositive" AIDS patients (Duesberg, 1992d). Since
viruses, as obligatory cellular parasites, can only be pathogenic
by infecting cells, these noninfectious viremias cannot be relevant
to the cause of AIDS. If assayed in vitro, in the absence
of free antiviral antibodies, antibodies may dissociate from neutralized
viruses and thus render the virus infectious for cells in culture.
This explains the discrepancy between the noninfectious "viremias"
in vivo and the relatively high infectivity recorded in
vitro (Coombs et al., 1989; Ho et al., 1989a).
Thus HIV viremia
is a rare, predictable consequence of immunodeficiency rather than
its cause.
3.5.7. HIV
to Depend on Cofactors for AIDS
Conceding
that HIV is not sufficient to cause AIDS, it is assumed to depend
on cofactors. Montagnier (Goldsmith, 1990; Lemaitre et al.,
1990; Balter, 1991) and Lo (Lo et al., 1991) have proposed
mycoplasmas that were discovered in their laboratories; Gallo has
proposed two viruses, herpes virus-6 and HTLV-I, which were both
discovered in his laboratory (Cotton, 1990; Gallo, 1990, 1991; Lusso
et al., 1991). Others have proposed cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr
virus (Quinn et al., 1987; Evans, 1989a; Root-Bernstein,
1990c), "age" (Evans, 1989a; Goedert et al., 1989;
Weiss and Jaffe, 1990; Biggar and the International Registry of
Seroconverters, 1990), unidentified "coagents" (Weyer
and Eggers, 1990; Eggers and Weyer, 1991), "clinical illness
promotion factors" (Evans, 1989b, 1992) and even "pre-existing
immune abnormalities" (Ludlam et al., 1985; Marion et
al., 1989; Ludlam, 1992) as cofactors of HIV.
However, cofactor
hypotheses only replace HIV-specific AIDS problems with the following
HIV-plus-cofactor-specific AIDS problems:
(1) Since
HIV is extremely rare and dormant in most antibody-positive AIDS
patients (Sections 2.2 and 3.3), it is hard to imagine how its various
AIDS-allies could benefit from their dormant "cofactor"
HIV.
(2) Since
HTLV-I is just as dormant and unable to kill cells as HIV (Duesberg,
1987; Blattner, 1990; Duesberg and Schwartz, 1992), it is even harder
to imagine how one dormant virus could help another dormant virus
to generate the biochemical activity that would be necessary to
cause a fatal disease.
(3) Since
mycoplasma (Freeman, 1979; Cotton, 1990; Goldsmith, 1990; Balter,
1991), herpes virus-6 (Cotton, 1990; Lusso et al., 1991),
cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus (Mims and White, 1984; Evans,
1989c) are each very common, if not ubiquitous, parasites (Freeman,
1979; Froesner, 1991), AIDS should develop in most people as soon
as they are infected by HIV. Likewise, "aged" people should
develop AIDS as soon as they are infected by HIV. Yet not more than
3-4% of HIV-antibody-positive Americans or Europeans and 0.3% of
antibody-positive Af |