If you’ve been diagnosed with bronchiectasis, COPD, or other chronic lung problems, and keep getting infections or mucus that tests positive for Aspergillus, you might be told you have Aspergillus bronchitis. But what does that mean? And how is it different from ABPA (Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis)?

This guide explains what Aspergillus bronchitis is, how it’s diagnosed, how common it is, and how it differs from ABPA.


🌬️ What Is Aspergillus Bronchitis?

Aspergillus bronchitis is a chronic fungal infection of the airways caused by Aspergillus fumigatus. It happens in people with damaged or scarred airways, such as:

  • Bronchiectasis

  • COPD

  • Cystic fibrosis

  • Occasionally asthma (if structural damage exists)

It’s a low-grade infection, not an allergy and not an invasive disease. The fungus lives in the mucus lining the airways, causing persistent inflammation, infection, and symptoms.


🔍 What Are the Symptoms?

Common symptoms What to know
Persistent cough Often brings up sticky or brown mucus
Worsening breathlessness Not always explained by asthma or infection alone
Fatigue or low energy Common in chronic fungal infections
Frequent infections May keep returning despite antibiotics
Wheeze Sometimes, especially in asthma or ABPA overlap
Weight loss or low-grade fever Possible in long-standing infection

📊 How Common Is It?

Aspergillus bronchitis is underdiagnosed but increasingly recognised — especially in patients referred to specialist centres.

Estimated frequency in different conditions:

Underlying condition Estimated rate of Aspergillus bronchitis
Bronchiectasis ~5–15%, higher in referral centres
COPD ~1–5%, especially with steroid use
Cystic fibrosis 5–10% (non-allergic cases)
Asthma (alone) Rare unless bronchiectasis is also present

It may be mistaken for a flare-up or chronic bacterial infection. Many people are told it’s “just colonisation” — but if symptoms persist and Aspergillus keeps growing in sputum, Aspergillus bronchitis should be considered.


đź§Ş How Is It Diagnosed?

There’s no single test. Diagnosis is based on clinical features plus evidence of fungal growth and a non-allergic immune pattern.

Test What it shows
Sputum culture / PCR Repeated detection of Aspergillus
Aspergillus IgG (blood) Often raised, shows chronic exposure
Aspergillus IgE & eosinophils Usually normal — helps exclude ABPA
CT scan Shows bronchiectasis, mucus plugging, but no cavitation
Response to antifungals Clinical improvement supports diagnosis

🔄 How Is It Different from ABPA?

ABPA is an allergic reaction to Aspergillus that mainly affects people with asthma or cystic fibrosis.
Aspergillus bronchitis, on the other hand, is a fungal infection in damaged airways, not an allergy.

Feature Aspergillus Bronchitis ABPA
Type of disease Chronic fungal infection Allergic lung disease
Immune markers High IgG, normal IgE High IgE and eosinophils
Sputum Repeated growth of Aspergillus May or may not grow
CT findings Bronchiectasis, mucus Central bronchiectasis, mucus plugs
Treatment Antifungals only Steroids ± antifungals
Typical patient Bronchiectasis, COPD Asthma (often severe), sometimes CF

Some patients can have both conditions at once, especially those with asthma and bronchiectasis — so testing is important.


đź’Š Treatment Options

Treatment Purpose
Oral antifungals (itraconazole, voriconazole) Main treatment — often for several months
Inhaled antifungals (e.g. nebulised amphotericin) Alternative if oral drugs not tolerated
Airway clearance physiotherapy Helps remove mucus and fungal load
Regular sputum testing To monitor treatment response
Steroids Not used unless there’s overlapping ABPA or asthma

đź§  Summary

Question Answer
Is it an infection? ✅ Yes — fungal infection in the airways
Is it an allergy? ❌ No — that’s ABPA
Can it coexist with ABPA? âś… Yes, in some cases
How is it diagnosed? Repeated Aspergillus in sputum + high IgG + symptoms
How is it treated? Antifungal medication (oral or nebulised)
Will it go away? Often improves with treatment, but monitoring is essential

đź’¬ What to Ask Your Doctor

  • Could my symptoms be from Aspergillus bronchitis?

  • Have I had sputum cultures and Aspergillus blood tests (IgG, IgE)?

  • Would antifungal treatment help me?

  • Should I be referred to a specialist centre (e.g. for CPA, ABPA, bronchiectasis)?

  • Am I on the best airway clearance and physiotherapy plan?

Path: Start » Diagnostics » 🟣 Aspergillus Bronchitis: A Patient Guide

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