Estimated prevalence 1–2% in bronchiectasis and chronic airway disease clinics.
Aspergillus Bronchitis (AB) is a chronic, symptomatic infection of the airways caused by Aspergillus species in people with underlying lung disease. It sits between simple colonisation and chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA), and is frequently overlooked or mislabelled as “recurrent infection,” “post-viral symptoms,” or uncontrolled bronchiectasis.
Unlike CPA, Aspergillus Bronchitis does not require cavities or major structural destruction — which makes it both easier to miss and surprisingly common among people with chronic airway disease.
When recognised and treated (usually with antifungal therapy for several months), symptoms often improve significantly. But because awareness remains low, most patients cycle through unnecessary antibiotics, repeated exacerbations, and worsening airway disease before the real cause is identified.
⭐ What Exactly Is Aspergillus Bronchitis?
Aspergillus Bronchitis is defined by:
-
chronic productive cough
-
sputum growing Aspergillus species repeatedly
-
airway inflammation
-
symptoms lasting over 3 months
-
underlying airway disease (bronchiectasis, CF, COPD, prior TB, ABPA)
-
response to antifungal therapy
Unlike ABPA:
-
there is no allergic response,
-
IgE is usually normal,
-
eosinophils are normal or mildly elevated.
Unlike CPA:
-
there are no cavities on imaging,
-
IgG may be normal or only slightly elevated,
-
disease is confined to the airways, not lung tissue.
This places AB in a “grey zone” — often invisible unless specifically looked for.
⭐ Why Aspergillus Bronchitis Is Missed
1. Symptoms mimic common chronic airway disease
Typical AB symptoms include:
-
daily productive cough
-
worsening sputum thickness
-
breathlessness
-
fatigue
-
repeated “chest infections”
-
slow-to-clear mucus
-
crackles or wheeze
These resemble:
-
bronchiectasis exacerbations
-
COPD flare-ups
-
chronic infection with Pseudomonas or NTM
-
post-viral cough
-
uncontrolled asthma
Without fungal awareness, clinicians default to bacterial explanations.
2. Sputum grows multiple organisms — Aspergillus is dismissed
In bronchiectasis, sputum frequently grows:
-
Haemophilus
-
Pseudomonas
-
Staphylococcus
-
Streptococcus
-
NTM
When Aspergillus appears, it’s often labelled:
-
“colonisation”
-
“contaminant”
-
“not clinically relevant”
But repeated isolation with persistent symptoms is highly suggestive of AB.
3. IgE/IgG results may be normal
Many clinicians expect high IgE or IgG to “confirm Aspergillus disease.”
But in Aspergillus Bronchitis:
-
IgE is usually normal
-
IgG can be normal or borderline
This leads to false reassurance.
4. Radiology rarely shows overt features
CT scans in AB may show:
-
mucus plugging
-
mild bronchial wall thickening
-
small nodules
-
progression of bronchiectasis
But they do not show the cavities of CPA or classic features of ABPA.
Therefore radiologists often report scans as “no significant change” or “stable bronchiectasis.”
5. Antibiotics appear to help — temporarily
Patients often improve slightly with:
-
amoxicillin
-
doxycycline
-
macrolides
-
ciprofloxacin
This gives clinicians the impression of bacterial disease, but symptoms soon return.
6. Lack of awareness
Many specialists (even in respiratory clinics) are unaware that Aspergillus Bronchitis:
-
exists as a distinct clinical entity
-
can be disabling
-
responds to antifungals
-
predicts progression to CPA if untreated
This leads to significant diagnostic delay.
⭐ Who Is at Highest Risk?
1. Bronchiectasis
The largest risk group.
Aspergillus Bronchitis may account for 1–2% of all bronchiectasis patients, and up to 5–10% in severe or frequent exacerbator groups.
2. Cystic Fibrosis (CF)
These patients frequently grow Aspergillus but not all have ABPA — some have Aspergillus Bronchitis.
3. COPD and chronic productive cough
Especially those with:
-
frequent mucus plugging
-
repeated “infective exacerbations”
-
progressive sputum production
4. Post-TB airway damage
Chronic airway deformity, scarring, and bronchiectasis from old TB predispose to fungal infection.
5. Post-COVID structural disease
A new and growing risk group, especially after prolonged ICU ventilation.
6. ABPA patients
Some patients develop Aspergillus Bronchitis during steroid-dominated treatment or after stopping antifungals.
⭐ Which Specialities Need Greater Awareness?
-
Respiratory medicine
(especially bronchiectasis clinicians and severe asthma teams) -
Infectious Diseases
(frequent respiratory presentations with chronic airway infection) -
Radiology
(to recognise subtle but progressive airway changes) -
Primary care
(“recurrent chest infection” or “persistent cough” patients) -
Physiotherapy & airway clearance teams
(excessive sputum with fungal elements) -
Cystic Fibrosis services
The National Aspergillosis Centre is the ideal referral destination when diagnosis is uncertain or symptoms persist despite typical management.
⭐ Red Flags Suggesting Aspergillus Bronchitis
1. Chronic (>3 months) productive cough + repeated Aspergillus in sputum
Even 2 positive sputums in the right clinical context should raise suspicion.
2. Bronchiectasis patient not improving on repeated antibiotics
3. Thick, tenacious mucus with black, grey, or brown plugs
4. Worsening CT bronchiectasis or mucus plugging
5. Absence of features typical for ABPA (normal IgE, no fleeting infiltrates)
6. Asthma or COPD patient with new persistent sputum
7. Partial response to antibiotics but rapid relapse
8. Unexplained fatigue and breathlessness in someone with airway disease
⭐ The Cost of Missed Aspergillus Bronchitis
If AB is not recognised early, consequences include:
-
repeated exacerbations
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accelerating bronchiectasis
-
long-term airway damage
-
chronic inflammation
-
steroid overuse
-
unnecessary antibiotics
-
repeated hospitalisations
-
progression to CPA in some patients
For health systems, missed diagnosis leads to:
-
higher admission rates
-
inappropriate long-term antibiotic use
-
avoidable CT scans and investigations
-
greater long-term burden of CPA
But antifungal therapy — when appropriately used — can offer marked symptom improvement and reduce exacerbation frequency.
⭐ Conclusion
Aspergillus Bronchitis is a distinct, treatable form of chronic airway disease seen in people with bronchiectasis, asthma, COPD, CF, and post-TB lung damage. Yet lack of awareness means many patients are repeatedly misdiagnosed with bacterial infections or unexplained chronic cough.
Recognising red flags, reviewing sputum results carefully, and considering antifungal therapy can dramatically improve outcomes. Early referral to specialist centres such as the National Aspergillosis Centre is recommended for complex cases or uncertain diagnosis.
Early identification prevents airway deterioration — and reduces the likelihood of progression to CPA.
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