IgE is a type of antibody your immune system makes when it reacts to something it sees as harmful — such as pollen, mould, pet dander, or certain foods.
In people with allergic or fungal lung disease, IgE can rise sharply because the body’s immune system is over-reacting.

High IgE isn’t dangerous on its own, but it shows that your immune system is ā€œswitched onā€ and inflamed. The goal is to calm that inflammation and reduce exposure to what’s triggering it — not simply to force the number down.


āœ… Best Practices for Reducing IgE Levels

1ļøāƒ£ Identify and Avoid Triggers

Reducing exposure is the first and most effective step.

  • Allergens: dust mites, moulds (especially Aspergillus), pollens, pets.

  • Environmental irritants: cigarette smoke, air pollution, strong odours, damp housing.

  • Use HEPA filters, good ventilation, and address damp or mould at home.

  • In ABPA, avoiding heavy exposure to fungal spores (e.g. gardening compost, rotting leaves, renovation dust) is particularly important.


2ļøāƒ£ Control Inflammation and Allergic Response

Because IgE is a marker of allergic inflammation, treatment focuses on calming the immune system:

  • Corticosteroids (oral or inhaled) can suppress inflammation and lower IgE over time.

  • Biologic therapies such as:

    • Omalizumab (Xolair) – directly targets IgE and lowers levels in allergic asthma or ABPA.

    • Mepolizumab, Benralizumab, or Dupilumab – reduce eosinophil-driven inflammation and may indirectly lower IgE.

    • Choice depends on your disease type and blood test results.

  • Antifungal therapy (e.g. itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole) can help reduce fungal load in ABPA and often leads to gradual IgE reduction as the reaction settles.


3ļøāƒ£ Manage Asthma or Lung Disease Well

Stable lungs mean fewer immune flares and less IgE activity:

  • Use prescribed inhalers regularly (preventers, not just relievers).

  • Follow your asthma or CPA action plan.

  • Attend regular reviews with your respiratory team.

  • Report any new symptoms such as increased cough, wheeze, or mucus plugs early.


4ļøāƒ£ Support Overall Immune Balance

Simple lifestyle steps can also help keep inflammation low:

  • Eat a balanced diet rich in fruit, vegetables, and omega-3 fats.

  • Sleep well and manage stress (both can worsen inflammation).

  • Avoid smoking or vaping.

  • Keep vaccinations (e.g. flu, COVID, pneumococcal) up to date.


šŸ“Š Interpreting IgE Levels

  • IgE levels naturally fluctuate and may take weeks or months to fall after treatment.

  • Doctors often look at the trend (rising or falling) rather than one number.

  • In ABPA, a fall of 35–50 % from baseline after treatment usually shows improvement.

  • It’s also possible to feel better while IgE remains high — so the result must always be interpreted alongside symptoms and scans.


🚫 What Not to Do

  • Don’t chase a ā€œperfectā€ IgE number — focus on feeling better and reducing inflammation.

  • Don’t stop steroids or antifungals suddenly unless advised by medical doctor, as this can cause a rebound flare.

  • Don’t rely on supplements or ā€œimmune boostersā€ that claim to lower IgE — none are proven to help and some may worsen allergies.


🩺 In Summary

Goal Best Approach
Reduce IgE triggers Avoid mould, dust, smoke, allergens
Calm inflammation Steroids or biologics under medical supervision
Treat underlying disease Antifungals for ABPA/CPA, good asthma control
Support immune balance Healthy lifestyle, good sleep, stress reduction

🌱 Key Message

You can’t ā€œswitch offā€ IgE completely — it’s part of your immune defence.
The aim is to reduce unnecessary immune activation, keep symptoms stable, and prevent lung damage.
With the right mix of trigger avoidance, anti-inflammatory treatment, and regular monitoring, IgE levels usually fall gradually as the condition improves.

Path: Start » Conditions » ABPA » 🧬 What IgE Is and Why It Matters

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