Seven key publications: pathogenicity, diagnostics, resistance, treatment, maxillofacial disease, and ABPA in COPD.
1. Comparative Overview of A. fumigatus, A. flavus, and A. niger
Rafique et al., J Infect Public Health, 2025
DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2025.103070
What this adds
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A major comparative review (2000–2025) of the three most clinically relevant Aspergillus species.
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Highlights broad clinical spectrum: allergy → chronic disease → invasive aspergillosis.
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Identifies species-specific concerns:
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A. fumigatus: globally dominant, rapidly evolving triazole resistance.
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A. flavus: important in warmer climates; high aflatoxin relevance.
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A. niger: relatively lower virulence but significant in sinus disease.
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Public health message: surveillance gaps persist, especially for non-fumigatus species.
Why it matters
A strong reference paper supporting the WHO prioritisation of Aspergillus, and reinforcing the need for:
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Better diagnostics
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Species-level identification
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Environmental resistance monitoring
2. GFP Fusion Protein Proteolysis in A. fumigatus
Paul & Moye-Rowley, G3 (Bethesda), 2025
DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkaf295
What this adds
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Fundamental molecular biology study revealing regulated degradation pathways of green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins inside A. fumigatus.
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Demonstrates how the fungus controls protein turnover under stress conditions.
Why it matters
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Advances tools for fungal cell biology.
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Supports drug development by clarifying pathways involved in stress response and antifungal tolerance.
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Reinforces WHO’s classification of A. fumigatus as one of the four most critical fungi to study.
3. ABPA in COPD: Case Series + Review
Ren et al., BMC Pulmonary Medicine, 2025
DOI: 10.1186/s12890-025-04027-8
What this adds
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11 COPD cases with confirmed Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis — highlighting:
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Under-recognition in COPD
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Overlap with chronic bronchitis/bronchiectasis symptoms
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Frequent misdiagnosis as recurrent infections or COPD exacerbations
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Provides diagnostic guidance and a literature synthesis.
Why it matters
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Significant implications for case finding across the UK.
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Supports NAC messaging: ABPA is not only an asthma disease.
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Reinforces need for:
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IgE/IgG screening
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Early CT imaging
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Awareness among COPD teams and primary care
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4. EL219: Next-Generation Polyene Antifungal
Youssef et al., AAC, 2025
DOI: 10.1128/aac.01400-25
What this adds
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Animal model evidence that EL219, a modern polyene, is effective against:
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Triazole-susceptible A. fumigatus
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Azole-resistant isolates
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Difficult species (A. lentulus, A. calidoustus)
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Why it matters
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Highly relevant to rising global antifungal resistance.
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Early indication that EL219 may fill a clinical gap similar to (or complementary to) olorofim and fosmanogepix.
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Suggests strong activity even in immunosuppressed models.
5. Misidentification & Triazole Resistance in Aspergillus tubingensis
Wang et al., JAMA Network Open, 2025
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.43630
What this adds
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Large Southern California population study showing:
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Frequent misidentification of A. tubingensis as A. niger.
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Notable azole resistance rates in correctly identified isolates.
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Stresses need for genomic sequencing or MALDI-TOF with updated libraries.
Why it matters
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Strong evidence that misidentification leads to:
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Inappropriate antifungal therapy
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Poor outcomes
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Supports calls for expanded diagnostic reference services such as MRCM.
6. 50-Year Review of Oral Fungal Infections in Thailand
Kosanwat et al., Clinical Oral Investigations, 2025
DOI: 10.1007/s00784-025-06685-8
What this adds
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Longitudinal study: 29% of deep infections involved aspergillosis.
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Mean age 62 → older adults most affected.
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Many cases were mucormycosis, histoplasmosis, or aspergillosis presenting late.
Why it matters
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Shows that oral/maxillofacial fungal disease remains under-recognised globally.
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Relevant to dental teams → better imaging + biopsy protocols needed.
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May help NAC/CARES identify referral pathways from dental medicine.
7. Management of Maxillary Sinus Aspergillosis with Implants
Khoury et al., Int J Oral Implantol, 2025
What this adds
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Real-world 3–10 year follow-up of 11 patients.
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Standardised approach:
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Surgical clearance
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Antifungal therapy
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Successful implant-prosthetic rehabilitation
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Why it matters
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Demonstrates excellent long-term outcomes when sinus aspergillosis is properly treated.
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Practical implications for:
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ENT surgeons
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Oral surgeons
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Implant dentistry
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Supports inclusion of aspergillosis in sinus disease differential diagnosis.
Cross-Cutting Themes Emerging This Week
1. Under-recognition and misidentification
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ABPA in COPD
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Misidentified A. tubingensis
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Asymptomatic sinus disease
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Oral/maxillofacial deep fungal infections
→ Key NAC message: We are missing cases in primary care, COPD clinics, ENT, and dentistry.
2. Antifungal resistance remains a central threat
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Contemporary reviews of species-specific resistance patterns
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EL219’s promise against resistant species
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Misidentification leading to incorrect susceptibility assumptions
3. Need for better diagnostics and reference centres
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Species-level identification is essential
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Supports arguments for expansion of MRCM-style national services
4. The clinical spectrum is broad
From allergy (ABPA in COPD) → chronic sinus disease → deep oral infections → invasive pulmonary aspergillosis.
This reinforces the message: aspergillosis is multi-specialty, not confined to respiratory medicine.
Weekly NAC/MRCM Take-Home Messages
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COPD teams should screen for ABPA more frequently—especially in patients with recurrent “infective exacerbations.”
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Species-level identification is increasingly important; misidentification contributes to treatment failure.
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New antifungals like EL219 show promise against resistant strains including A. lentulus.
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Dental and ENT teams need better awareness: sinus and oral fungal infections remain overlooked but treatable.
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Global reviews show growing public health significance of Aspergillus species—aligning with WHO priorities.
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