A calm, supportive guide for patients living with Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA)
Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA) can be confusing.
Some people hear “fungus” and think it is a dangerous infection.
Others hear “allergy” and think it has nothing to do with fungi at all.
The truth is somewhere in the middle — and understanding this can make your treatment feel much clearer and less frightening.
This article explains:
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Whether ABPA is an infection, an allergy, or both
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How the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus fits into the picture
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Why biologics help — and whether they allow the fungus to grow
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Why your future with ABPA is more hopeful than ever
🌼 1. Is ABPA an infection or an allergic over-reaction?
The simplest explanation is:
ABPA happens when Aspergillus lives in mucus in the airways, and the immune system overreacts. It’s driven by allergy, not by fungal invasion.
In ABPA:
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Aspergillus fumigatus sits in mucus, especially in asthma, bronchiectasis or cystic fibrosis
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It does not invade or damage lung tissue
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The immune system becomes over-sensitised and reacts too strongly
This allergic reaction triggers:
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Very high IgE
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High eosinophils
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Swelling, tightness, wheeze
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Thick “stringy” mucus or plugs
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Repeated flare-ups that feel like chest infections
The inflammation — not the fungus — is what damages the lungs over time.
🌻 2. If it’s not a typical infection, why treat the fungus?
Even though ABPA is allergic, reducing fungal load can still help.
Here’s why:
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Less fungus in mucus → less allergen
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Less allergen → less immune reaction
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Less reaction → fewer flare-ups, better breathing
This is why some people take antifungals.
But antifungals are not always necessary, especially today with the arrival of biologics.
🌈 3. Do biologics weaken the immune system and let the fungus grow?
No.
This is a very common worry — but the biologics used for ABPA do not suppress the parts of the immune system that keep you safe from fungi.
Biologics such as:
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Omalizumab (anti-IgE)
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Mepolizumab / Benralizumab (anti-IL-5)
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Dupilumab (anti-IL-4/IL-13)
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Tezepelumab (anti-TSLP)
target overactive allergic pathways, not antifungal defences.
They do not affect:
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Neutrophils
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Macrophages
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Dectin-1
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TLR antifungal pathways
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Complement
These are the real fungus-clearing systems — and biologics leave them intact.
🍃 4. Do biologics actually help clear fungus? Surprisingly, sometimes yes.
Many patients on biologics show:
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Fewer mucus plugs
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Better airflow
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Fewer positive sputum cultures
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Reduced symptoms
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Lower exacerbation rates
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Less need for steroids or antifungals
When mucus plugs shrink, fungus loses its hiding place.
Your natural defences can finally clear it.
So biologics do not encourage growth — they may even help reduce fungal load.
🌺 5. Why are outcomes improving so much?
ABPA used to be a condition dominated by:
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frequent flare-ups
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repeated steroids
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fear of lung damage
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long periods of being unwell
Today, with biologics:
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far fewer flare-ups
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easier breathing
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more stable lung function
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much less steroid use
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better quality of life
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higher confidence and control
For many patients, biologics are transforming ABPA from a cycle of crises into a more manageable long-term condition.
🌼 6. Key reassurance
If you remember only one sentence, let it be this:
Biologics calm the allergic response that causes ABPA, without weakening your natural ability to clear fungus — and many patients do better than ever on them.
🌟 7. Moving forward with confidence
ABPA is complex, but it is treatable, manageable, and increasingly well-understood.
You are not dealing with a dangerous lung infection — you are dealing with an over-active immune response that modern treatments can control.
With the right support, airway clearance, the best inhalers, and (where needed) biologics or antifungals, most people:
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stabilise
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breathe more easily
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reduce flare-ups
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protect their lungs
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live full, active lives
You’re not alone — and the future for ABPA care has never looked brighter.
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