Most people – including many doctors – associate Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA) almost exclusively with asthma or cystic fibrosis. In fact, the current diagnostic criteria for ABPA often assume the presence of asthma as a prerequisite. But what happens when a patient has all the features of ABPA… without ever having had asthma?

This article explores the possibility – and growing recognition – of ABPA without asthma.


🔍 What Is ABPA?

ABPA is an allergic (hypersensitivity) reaction to the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, which can colonise the lungs and cause:

  • Severe allergic inflammation

  • Damage to lung tissue (bronchiectasis)

  • High levels of IgE (often >1000 IU/mL)

  • Positive skin tests or blood tests for Aspergillus

Traditionally, ABPA is diagnosed in people with asthma or cystic fibrosis, where the airways are already vulnerable.


❗But Can ABPA Occur Without Asthma?

Yes. Though uncommon, there are confirmed cases where ABPA occurs in people who:

  • Do not have asthma

  • Have no wheeze, breathlessness or variability in symptoms

  • Show no reversibility on a bronchodilator test

  • May not respond to inhaled corticosteroids

This presentation is now increasingly recognised – particularly:

  • After viral infections like COVID-19

  • In people exposed to environmental moulds

  • In those with no personal or family history of asthma


🧪 Diagnostic Clues

Patients with ABPA but no asthma typically still show:

  • Very high total IgE levels

  • Positive Aspergillus-specific IgE and IgG

  • Radiological changes like central bronchiectasis

  • Sometimes eosinophilia in blood

But they do not show:

  • Classic asthma symptoms (e.g. wheeze, reversible breathlessness)

  • Improvement with bronchodilators

  • Variable peak flow readings


🧬 How Might This Happen?

There are a few theories:

  • Some people have a strong allergic immune response (IgE-driven) to Aspergillus alone, even without underlying asthma

  • COVID-19 and other infections may prime the immune system or damage airways enough to allow fungal colonisation

  • Not all bronchial hypersensitivity is asthma — the airway inflammation in ABPA is unique and not always “asthmatic” in pattern


✅ What Tests Can Help Confirm or Rule Out Asthma?

For patients who have ABPA but no clear asthma symptoms:

  • Bronchodilator reversibility test → May be negative

  • Methacholine or histamine challenge test → Gold standard for confirming asthma

  • FeNO test → Measures eosinophilic airway inflammation (may be high in both ABPA and asthma)

  • Peak flow monitoring → Often stable in ABPA without asthma

These tests can help clarify the diagnosis and prevent mislabeling patients as asthmatic when they are not.


🧭 Why Does It Matter?

Correct diagnosis matters because:

  • Not all ABPA patients benefit from inhaled corticosteroids or asthma drugs

  • Treatment should be tailored — e.g. antifungals and oral steroids for ABPA, but not unnecessary asthma medications

  • Misdiagnosis may delay the right treatment and overburden patients


🩺 A Call to Clinicians

If a patient has high IgE, bronchiectasis, and strong Aspergillus sensitisation — but no clinical asthma — consider ABPA without asthma.

Request confirmatory tests before labeling someone asthmatic for life. In these rare cases, asthma criteria do not fully apply — but the patient still needs support for ABPA.


🧾 Summary

Feature ABPA With Asthma ABPA Without Asthma
Wheeze/breathlessness Common May be absent
Bronchodilator response Often positive Usually negative
Total IgE High High
Aspergillus IgE/IgG Positive Positive
Imaging (HRCT) Bronchiectasis Bronchiectasis

🙋 What Can Patients Do?

If you’ve been diagnosed with ABPA but don’t believe you have asthma:

  • Ask your doctor about further testing to confirm or rule out asthma

  • Keep a record of your symptoms, peak flow (if used), and medication response

  • Discuss your IgE levels, CT scan results, and whether other diagnoses (e.g. chronic pulmonary aspergillosis) might apply

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