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Part
1
AIDS Acquired by Drug Consumption and Other Noncontagious Risk Factors
By Peter H. Duesberg
Pharmacology
& Therapeutics 55: 201-277, 1992
Contents
Part 1
1. Virus-AIDS
Hypothesis Fails to Predict Epidemiology and Pathology of AIDS
2. Definition of AIDS
2.1. AIDS: 2 epidemics, sub-epidemics and 25 epidemic-specific diseases
2.1.1. The epidemics by case numbers, gender and age
2.1.2. AIDS diseases
2.1.3. AIDS risk groups and risk-group specific AIDS diseases
2.2. The HIV-AIDS hypothesis, or the definition of AIDS
2.3. Alternative infectious theories of AIDS
1. Virus-Aids
Hypothesis Fails to Predict Epidemiology and Pathology of Aids
At a press
conference in April 1984, the American Secretary of Health and Human
Services announced that the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
was an infectious disease, caused by a sexually and parenterally
transmitted retrovirus, now termed human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV). The announcement predicted an antiviral vaccine within two
years (Connor, 1987; Adams, 1989; Farber, 1992; Hodgkinson, 1992).
However, the
hypothesis has been a complete failure in terms of public health
benefits. Despite unprecedented efforts in research and health care,
the hypothesis has failed to generate the promised vaccine, and
it has failed to develop a cure (Thompson, 1990; Savitz, 1991; Duesberg,
1992b; Waldholz, 1992). The U.S. Government alone spends annually
about $1 billion for AIDS research and about $3 billion for AIDS-related
health care (National Center for Health Statistics, 1992). The situation
has become so desperate that the director for AIDS research at the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) promotes via press release,
eight years after HIV was declared the cause of AIDS, an as yet
unedited paper, which has no more to offer than a renewed effort
at causing AIDS in monkeys: "The best possible situation would
be to have a human virus [HIV] that infects monkeys" (Steinbrook,
1992). This is said nine years after the NIH first started infecting
chimpanzees with HIV-over 150 so far at a cost of $40,000-50,000
apiece-all of which are still healthy (Hilts, 1992; Steinbrook,
1992) (Section 3.3 and Jorg Eichberg, personal communication).
Moreover,
the virus-AIDS hypothesis has failed completely to predict the course
of the epidemic (Institute of Medicine, 1988; Duesberg, 1989c, 1991a;
Duesberg and Ellison, 1990; Thompson, 1990; Savitz, 1991). For example,
the NIH and others have predicted that AIDS would "explode"
into the general population (Shorter, 1987; Anderson and May, 1992)
and the Global AIDS Policy Coalition from Harvard's International
AIDS Center declared in June 1992, "The pandemic is dynamic,
volatile and unstable.... An explosion of HIV has recently occurred
in Southeast Asia, in Thailand ..." (Mann and the Global AIDS
Policy Coalition, 1992). But despite widespread alarm the "general
population" has been spared from AIDS, although there is a
general increase in unwanted pregnancies and conventional venereal
diseases (Institute of Medicine, 1988; Aral and Holmes, 1991). Instead,
American and European AIDS has spread, during the last 10 years,
steadily but almost exclusively among intravenous drug users and
male homosexuals who were heavy users of sexual stimulants and had
hundreds of sexual partners (Sections 2.1.3, 3.3.4 and 4.3.2).
The hypothesis
even fails to predict the AIDS diseases an infected person may develop
and whether and when an HIV-infected person is to develop either
diarrhea or dementia, Kaposi's sarcoma or pneumonia (Grimshaw, 1987;
Albonico, 1991a,b). In addition the hypothesis fails to explain
why the annual AIDS risks differ over 100-fold between different
HIV-infected risk groups, i.e. recipients of transfusions, babies
born to drug-addicted mothers, American/European homosexuals, intravenous
drug users, hemophiliacs and Africans (Section 3.4.4).
Clearly a
correct medical hypothesis might not produce a cure or the prevention
of a disease, as for example theories on cancer or sickle-cell anemia.
However, a correct medical hypothesis must be able to (1) identify
those at risk for a disease, (2) predict the kind of disease a person
infected or affected by its putative cause will get, (3) predict
how soon disease will follow its putative cause and (4) lead to
a determination of how the putative agent causes the disease. Since
this is not true for the virus-AIDS hypothesis, this hypothesis
must be fundamentally flawed. Further, it seems particularly odd
that an AIDS vaccine cannot be developed, since HIV induces highly
effective virus-neutralizing antibodies within weeks after infection
(Clark et al., 1991; Daar et al., 1991). These are
the same antibodies that are detected by the widely used "AIDS-test"
(Institute of Medicine, 1986; Duesberg, 1989c; Rubinstein, 1990).
In view of
this, AIDS is subjected here to a critical analysis aimed at identifying
a cause that can correctly predict its epidemiology, pathology and
progression.
2. Definition
of AIDS
2.1. AIDS:
2 Epidemics, Sub-Epidemics and 25 Epidemic-Specific Diseases
AIDS includes
25 previously known diseases and two clinically and epidemiologically
very different AIDS epidemics, one in America and Europe, the other
in Africa (Table 1) (Centers for Disease Control, 1987; Institute
of Medicine, 1988; World Health Organization, 1992a). The American/European
epidemic falls into four sub-epidemics: the male homosexual, the
intravenous drug user, the hemophilia and the transfusion recipient
epidemics (Table 1).
2.1.1. The
Epidemics by Case Numbers, Gender and Age
The American/European
AIDS epidemics of homosexuals and intravenous drug users are new,
starting with drug-using homosexual AIDS patients in Los Angeles
and New York in 1981 (Centers for Disease Control, 1981; Gottlieb
et al., 1981; Jaffe et al., 1983a). By December 1991,
206,392 AIDS cases had been recorded in the U.S. and 65,979 in Europe
(Table 1) (World Health Organization, 1992a; Centers for Disease
Control, 1992b). The U.S. has reported about 30,000-40,000 new cases
annually since 1987, and Europe reports about 12,000-16,000 cases
annually (World Health Organization, 1992a; Centers for Disease
Control, 1992b).
Remarkably
for a presumably infectious disease, 90% of all American and 86%
of all European AIDS patients are males. Nearly all American (98%)
and European (96%) AIDS patients are over 20 years old; the remaining
2% and 4%, respectively, are mostly infants (Table 1) (World Health
Organization, 1992a; Centers for Disease Control, 1992b). There
is very little AIDS among teenagers, as only 789 American teenagers
have developed AIDS over the last 10 years, including 160 in 1991
and 170 in 1990 (Centers for Disease Control, 1992b).
Since 1985,
129,066 AIDS cases have been recorded in Africa (World Health Organization,
1992b), mainly from the people of Central Africa (Blattner, 1991).
Unlike the American and European cases, the African cases are distributed
equally between the sexes (Quinn et al., 1986; Blattner et
al., 1988; Institute of Medicine, 1988; Piot et al.,
1988; Goodgame, 1990) and range "in age from 8 to 85 years"
(Widy-Wirski et al., 1988).
An AIDS crisis
that was reported to "loom" in Thailand as of 1990 (Anderson,
1990; Smith, 1990) and that was predicted to "explode"
now (Mann and the Global AIDS Policy Coalition, 1992) has generated
only 123 AIDS patients from 1984 until June 1991 (Weniger et
al., 1991).
2.1.2. AIDS
Diseases
The majority
of American (62%) and European (75%) AIDS patients have microbial
diseases or opportunistic infections that result from a previously
acquired immunodeficiency (World Health Organization, 1992a; Centers
for Disease Control, 1992b). In America these include Pneumocystis
pneumonia (50%), candidiasis (17%) and mycobacterial infections
such as tuberculosis (11%), toxoplasmosis (5%), cytomegalovirus
(8%) and herpes virus disease (4%) (Table 1) (Centers for Disease
Control, 1992b). Pneumocystis pneumonia is often described
and perceived as an AIDS-specific pneumonia. However, Pneumocystis
carinii is a ubiquitous fungal parasite that is present in all
humans and may become active upon immune deficiency like many others
(Freeman, 1979; Pifer, 1984; Williford Pifer et al., 1988;
Root-Bernstein, 1990a). Since bacterial opportunists of immune deficiency,
like tuberculosis bacillus or pneumococcus, are readily defeated
with antibiotics, fungal and viral pneumonias predominate in countries
where antibiotics are readily available. This is particularly true
for risk groups that use antibiotics chronically as AIDS prophylaxis
(Callen, 1990; Bardach, 1992). Indeed, young rats treated for several
weeks simultaneously with antibiotics and immunosuppressive cortisone
all developed Pneumocystis pneumonia spontaneously (Weller,
1955).
Table
1. AIDS Statistics*
Epidemics
American European African
AIDS total 1985-1991
206,000 66,000 129,000AIDS annual since 1990 30-40,000 12-16,000 ~20,000HIV
carriers since 1985 1 million 500,000 6 millionAnnual AIDS per HIV
carrier 3-4% 3% about 0.3%AIDS by sex 90% male 86% male 50%
maleAIDS by age, over 20 years 98% 96% ?AIDS by risk groupmale homosexual
62% 48%intravenous drugs 32% 33%transfusions 2% 3%hemophiliacs
1% 3%general population 3% 13% 100%
AIDS by Disease:Microbial
50% Pneurnocystis 75% fever % pneumonia opportunistic diarrhea 17%
candidiasis infections tuberculosis 11% mycobacterial disease slim
disease including 3% tuberculosis 5% toxoplasmosis 8% cytomegalovirus
4% herpes
virus
Microbial total
62% 75% about 90% (sum > 62% due to overlap)
Non-Microbial
19% wasting 5% wasting 10% Kaposi's 12% Kaposi's 6% dementia 5% dementia
3% lymphoma 3% lymphoma
Non-microbial
total 38% 25%
*Data from
references cited in Section 2. There are small (± 1%) discrepancies
between some numbers cited here and the most recent surveys cited
in the text, because some calculations are based on previous surveys.
Contrary to
its name, AIDS of many American (38%) and European (25%) patients
does not result from immunodeficiency and microbes (Section 3.5.8).
Instead, these patients suffer dementia (6%/5%), wasting disease
(19%/5%), Kaposi's sarcoma (10%/12%) and lymphoma (3%/3%) (Table
1) (World Health Organization, 1992a; Centers for Disease Control,
1992b).
The African
epidemic includes diseases that have been long established in Africa,
such as fever, diarrhea, tuberculosis and "slim disease"
(Table l) (Colebunders et al., 1987; Konotey-Ahulu, 1987;
Pallangyo et al., 1987; Berkley et al., 1989; Evans,
1989a; Goodgame, 1990; De Cock et al., 1991; Gilks, 1991).
Only about 1% are Kaposi's sarcomas (Widy-Wirski et al.,
1988). The African AIDS definition is based primarily on these Africa-specific
diseases (Widy-Wirski et al., 1988) "because of limited
facilities for diagnosing HIV infection" (De Cock et al.,
1991).
2.1.3. AIDS
Risk Groups and Risk-group Specific AIDS Diseases
Almost all
American (97%) and European (87%) AIDS patients come from abnormal
health risk groups whose health had been severely compromised prior
to the onset of AIDS: 62% of American (47% of European) AIDS patients
are male homosexuals who have frequently used oral aphrodisiac drugs
(Section 4), 32% (33%) are intravenous drug users, 2% (3%) are critically
ill recipients of transfusions and 1% (3%) are hemophiliacs (Institute
of Medicine, 1988; Brenner et al., 1990; Centers for Disease
Control, 1992b; World Health Organization, 1992a). About 38% of
the American teenage AIDS cases are hemophiliacs and recipients
of transfusions, 25% are intravenous drug users or sexual partners
of intravenous drug users and 25% are male homosexuals (Centers
for Disease Control, 1992b). Approximately 70% of the American babies
with AIDS are born to drug-addicted mothers ("crack babies")
and 13% are born with congenital deficiencies like hemophilia (Centers
for Disease Control, 1992b). Only 3% of the American and 13% of
the European AIDS patients are from "undetermined exposure
categories," i.e. from the general population (Table 1) (World
Health Organization, 1992a; Centers for Disease Control, 1992b).
Some of the differences between European and American statistics
may reflect differences in national AIDS standards between different
European countries and the U.S. and differences in reporting between
the World Health Organization (WHO) and the American Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) (World Health Organization, 1992a). By contrast
to the American and European AIDS epidemics, African AIDS does not
claim its victims from sexual, behavioral or clinical risk groups.
The AIDS epidemics
of different risk groups present highly characteristic, country-specific
and sub-epidemic-specific AIDS diseases (Table 1 and Table 2):
1. About
90% of the AIDS diseases from Africa are old African diseases that
are very different from those of the American/European epidemic
(Section 2.1.2, Table 1). The African diseases do not include Pneumocystis
pneumonia and candidiasis (Goodgame, 1990), although Pneumocystis
and Candida are ubiquitous microbes in all humans including
Africans (Freeman, 1979; Pifer, 1984).
2. The American/European
epidemic falls into several sub-epidemics based on sub-epidemic-specific
diseases:
a) American
homosexuals have Kaposi's sarcoma 20 times more often than all other
American AIDS patients (Selik et al., 1987; Beral et al.,
1990).
b) Intravenous
drug users have a proclivity for tuberculosis (Sections 4.5 and
4.6).
c) "Crack"
(cocaine) smokers exhibit pneumonia and tuberculosis (Sections 3.4.5
and 4.6).
d) Ninety-nine
percent of all hemophiliacs with AIDS have opportunistic infections,
of which about 70% are fungal and viral pneumonias, but less than
1% have Kaposi's sarcoma (Evatt et al., 1984; Centers for
Disease Control, 1986; Selik et al., 1987; Koerper, 1989).
e) Nearly
all recipients of transfusions have pneumonia (Curran et al.,
1984; Selik et al., 1987).
f) HIV-positive
wives of hemophiliacs exhibit only pneumonia and a few other AIDS-defining
opportunistic infections (Section 3.4.4.5).
g) American
babies exclusively have bacterial diseases (18%) and a high rate
of dementia (14%) compared to adults (6%) (Table 1) (Centers for
Disease Control, 1992b).
h) Users
of the cytotoxic DNA chain terminator AZT, prescribed to inhibit
HIV, develop anemia, leukopenia and nausea (Section 4.6.2).
3. The Thai
mini-epidemic of 123 is made up of intravenous drug users (20%),
heterosexual male and female "sex workers" (50%) and male
homosexuals (30%) (Weniger et al., 1991). Among the Thais
24% have tuberculosis, 22% have pneumonia and other opportunistic
infections common in Thailand and 10% have had septicemia, which
is indicative of intravenous drug consumption (Weniger et al.,
1991).
2.2. The HIV-AIDS
Hypothesis, or the Definition of AIDS
Based on epidemiological
data collected between 1981 and 1983, AIDS researchers from the
CDC (Centers for Disease Control, 1986) "found in gay culture-particularly
in its perceived "extreme" and "non-normative"
aspects (that is "promiscuity" and recreational drugs)-the
crucial clue to the cause of the new syndrome" (Oppenheimer,
1992). Accordingly the CDC had initially favored a "lifestyle"
hypothesis for AIDS.
However, by
1983 immunodeficiency was also recorded in hemophiliacs, some women
and intravenous drug users. Therefore, the CDC adopted the "hepatitis
B analogy" (Oppenheimer, 1992) and re-interpreted AIDS as a
new viral disease, transmitted sexually and parenterally by blood
products and needles shared for the injection of intravenous drugs
(Francis et al., 1983; Jaffe et al., 1983b; Centers
for Disease Control, 1986; Oppenheimer, 1992). In April 1984 the
American Secretary of Health and Human Services and the virus researcher
Robert Gallo announced at a press conference that the new AIDS virus
was found. The announcement was made, and a test for antibody against
the virus-termed the "AIDS test"-was registered for a
patent, before even one American study had been published on this
virus (Connor, 1987; Adams, 1989; Crewdson, 1989; Culliton, 1990;
Rubinstein, 1990). Since then most medical scientists have believed
that AIDS is infectious, spread by the transmission of HIV.
According
to the virus-AIDS hypothesis the 25 different AIDS diseases and
the very different AIDS epidemics and sub-epidemics are all held
together by a single common cause, HIV. There are two strains of
HIV that are 50% related, HIV-1 and HIV-2. But as yet only one American-born
AIDS patient has been infected by HIV-2 (O'Brien et al.,
1992). Since nearly all HIV-positive AIDS cases recorded to date
are infected by HIV-1, this strain will be referred to as HIV in
this article. The HIV-AIDS hypothesis proposes: (a) that HIV is
a sexually, parenterally and perinatally transmitted virus, (b)
that it causes immunodeficiency by killing T-cells, but on average
only 10 years after infection in adults and two years after infection
in infants-a period that is described as the "latent period
of HIV" because the virus is assumed to become reactivated
in AIDS-and (c) that all AIDS diseases are consequences of this
immunodeficiency (Coffin et al., 1986; Institute of Medicine,
1986, 1988; Gallo, 1987; Blattner et al., 1988; Gallo and
Montagnier, 1988; Lemp et al., 1990; Weiss and Jaffe, 1990;
Blattner, 1991; Goudsmit, 1992).
Because of
this belief, 25 previously known, and in part entirely unrelated
diseases have been redefined as AIDS, provided they occur in the
presence of HIV. HIV is in practice only detectable indirectly via
antiviral antibodies, because of its chronic inactivity even in
AIDS patients (Section 3.3). These antibodies are identified with
disrupted HIV, a procedure that is termed the "AIDS test"
(Institute of Medicine, 1986; Rubinstein, 1990). Virus isolation
is a very inefficient and expensive procedure, designed to activate
dormant virus from leukocytes. It depends on the activation of a
single, latent HIV from about 5 million leukocytes from an antibody-positive
person. For this purpose the cells must be propagated in vitro
away from the virus-suppressing immune system of the host. Virus
may then be detected weeks later in the culture medium (Weiss et
al., 1988; Duesberg, 1989c).
Antibodies
against HIV were originally claimed to be present in most (88%)
AIDS patients (Sarngadharan et al., 1984), but have since
been confirmed in no more than about 50% of the American AIDS patients
(Institute of Medicine, 1988; Selik et al., 1990). The rest
are presumptively diagnosed based on disease criteria outlined by
the CDC (Centers for Disease Control, 1987; Institute of Medicine,
1988). Because of confidentiality laws more tests are probably done
than are reported to the CDC.
Since the
"AIDS test" became available in 1985, over 20 million
tests have been performed annually in the U.S. alone on blood donors,
servicemen and applicants to the Army, AIDS patients and many others,
and millions more are performed in Europe, Russia, Africa and other
countries (Section 3.6). On the basis of such widespread testing,
clearly the most comprehensive in the history of virology, about
1 million, or 0.4% of mostly healthy Americans (Curran et al.,
1985; Institute of Medicine, 1988; Duesberg, 1991a; Vermund, 1991;
Centers for Disease Control, 1992a), 0.5 million, or 0.2% of Western
Europeans (Mann et al., 1988; Blattner, 1991; World Health
Organization, 1992a), 6 million, or 10% of mostly healthy Central
Africans (Curran et al., 1985; Institute of Medicine, 1988;
Piot et al., 1988; Goodgame, 1990; Blattner, 1991; Anderson
and May, 1992) and 300,000 or 0.5% of healthy Thais (Weniger et
al., 1991) are estimated to carry antibodies to HIV (Table 1).
According to the CDC the incidence of HIV-2 is "relatively
high" in Western Africa with a record of 9% in one community,
but "exceedingly low" in the U.S. where not even one infection
was detected among 31,630 blood donors (O'Brien et al., 1992).
2.3. Alternative
Infectious Theories of AIDS
In view of
the heterogeneity of the AIDS diseases and the difficulties in reducing
them to a common, active microbe, several investigators have proposed
that AIDS is caused by a multiplicity of infectious agents such
as viruses and microbes, or combinations of HIV with other microbes
(Sonnabend et al., 1983; Konotey-Ahulu, 1987, 1989; Stewart,
1989; Cotton, 1990; Goldsmith, 1990; Lemaitre et al., 1990;
Root-Bernstein, 1990a,c; Balter, 1991; Lo et al., 1991).
However, the
proponents of infectious AIDS who reject HIV as the sole cause or
see it as one of several causes of AIDS have failed to establish
a consistent alternative to or cofactor for HIV. Instead, they typically
blame AIDS on viruses and microbes that are widespread and either
harmless or not life-threatening to a normal immune system, such
as Pneumocystis, cytomegalovirus, herpes virus, hepatitis
virus, tuberculosis bacillus, Candida, mycoplasma, treponema,
gonococci, toxoplasma and cryptosporidiae (Section 3.5.7) (Freeman,
1979; Mims and White, 1984; Pifer, 1984; Evans, 1989c; Mills and
Masur, 1990; Bardach, 1992). Since such microbes are more commonly
active in AIDS patients than in others, they argue that either chronic
or repeated infections by such microbes would generate fatal AIDS
(Sonnabend et al., 1983; Stewart, 1989; Mills and Masur,
1990; Root-Bernstein, 1990a,c).
Yet all of
these microbes also infect people with normal immune systems either
chronically or repeatedly without causing AIDS (Freeman, 1979; Mims
and White, 1984; Evans, 1989c; Mills and Masur, 1990). It follows
that pathogenicity by these microbes in AIDS patients is a consequence
of immunodeficiency acquired by other causes (Duesberg, 1990c, 1991a).
This is why most of these infections are termed opportunistic.
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