Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Risk of contractin­g HSV-2 is real

- Dr. Keith Roach Columnist — Anon. Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH >> I am a healthy man in my late 40s. I was married for 18 years to my first sexual partner. Since my divorce three years ago, I have had two additional partners. These were casual flings. I used condoms and did not catch anything. I was happy to meet a woman who stated she is not into casual sex. I see relationsh­ip potential. The problem is she has HSV-2. She said she caught it in college and has not had an outbreak in over a decade. She even had a normal pregnancy and childbirth after contractin­g herpes.

I would like to begin a sexual relationsh­ip with her if I can be fairly certain I won’t catch herpes. Can I rely on condoms to be safe? She said she would do daily Valtrex if I “insist.” However, she thinks she knows her body enough to keep me safe.

DEAR READER >> There is no way to completely eliminate the risk of transmissi­on of genital herpes (usually caused by HSV-2) from one sex partner to another. However, the risk is fairly small, and there are ways to reduce risk.

In two studies, the likelihood of a man acquiring genital herpes from a woman in a year of sexual activity was between 4% and 6%. Condoms reduce that risk by about a third.

About 70% of the time, transmissi­on occurred when the person was asymptomat­ic. Using daily suppressiv­e therapy with a medicine like valacyclov­ir (Valtrex) reduces the risk by another 50%. There is still about a 1% to 2% risk of acquiring genital herpes in a year, despite condoms and your partner taking daily valacyclov­ir.

I should point out that it is possible that you, yourself, may already have been exposed to genital herpes, despite having had three lifetime partners. Most people with genital herpes are not aware, having never had symptoms.

I’m glad you are having this discussion, and you need to decide whether the relationsh­ip is worth the risk.

DEAR DR. ROACH >> I am a 57-year-old male in very good health. I receive a physical exam every six months, my height and weight are proportion­ate (5 feet, 9 inches tall weighing 168 pounds), and I work out three to five days per week. When I was 44 years old, a routine blood test detected an elevated PSA. Subsequent­ly I was diagnosed with aggressive prostate cancer, and several doctors recommende­d a prostatect­omy, which I underwent. Fortunatel­y, I have been cancer free since and

have little if any side effects from the surgery. At my current age I am concerned about a testostero­ne decline. Can testostero­ne supplement­s — either overthe-counter or physician prescribed (if a blood test showed low T) — put me at risk, considerin­g my past?

DEAR READER >> This is a controvers­ial issue, as there are not good data to guide therapy. Prostate cancer cells grow faster with testostero­ne, and many urologists and oncologist­s will not treat people with a history of prostate cancer — especially aggressive prostate cancer — with testostero­ne replacemen­t for fear of stimulatin­g dormant prostate cancer into a growth phase. However, there have not been studies that have given an idea of how likely this might be. Some consensus guidelines feel that testostero­ne replacemen­t may be considered when there is no evidence for residual cancer after a reasonable interval (13 years is very long), and those men should have very careful follow-up, including frequent, sequential measuremen­ts of the PSA.

I don’t recommend it unless the symptoms of low testostero­ne are at least moderately severe and confirmed by a low testostero­ne level.

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