An overview for patients and non-specialist readers — 19 January 2026
Over the past four months, research into aspergillosis — including chronic, allergic, and invasive forms — has continued across a range of clinical trials. These studies include treatments, diagnostics, and better ways to understand who gets sick and how best to manage it.
Below is a summary of the most relevant trials now active, recruiting, or updated recently. Whenever possible, we link to the official ClinicalTrials.gov record so you can see the details, eligibility criteria, locations, and contact information.
📋 Clinical Trials of Interest
1. Phase III Olorofim Trial for Invasive Aspergillosis
Study title: Olorofim Aspergillus Infection Study
Condition: Invasive aspergillosis (IA)
What it’s testing: A new antifungal drug called olorofim compared with liposomal amphotericin B followed by standard care.
Status: Active — not currently recruiting new patients but ongoing through 2026.
Official record: Olorofim Aspergillus Infection Study on ClinicalTrials.gov
Last updated: January 4, 2026
Why this matters: Olorofim is a completely new class of antifungal designed for patients whose infection is difficult to treat with standard drugs. It may offer an alternative for those with drug-resistant or treatment-intolerant infections.
2. Rezafungin in Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA)
Study title: Rezafungin for Treatment of Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis
Condition: Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis
What it’s testing: A long-acting echinocandin antifungal (rezafungin) that might reduce dosing frequency.
Status: Recruiting / active
Official record: Rezafungin CPA Trial on ClinicalTrials.gov
Why this matters: Current CPA treatments can require daily medication and prolonged therapy. Rezafungin’s once-weekly dosing could help reduce burden and hospital visits.
3. Combination Trial: Ibrexafungerp + Voriconazole (SCYNERGIA)
Study title: Evaluate Safety and Efficacy of Ibrexafungerp With Voriconazole in Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis
Condition: Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis
What it’s testing: Whether combining two antifungals works better than standard therapy alone.
Status: Active (ongoing)
Official record: SCYNERGIA Combination Trial on ClinicalTrials.gov
Why this matters: Some patients don’t respond well to single-agent treatment. Combination therapy may help in severe cases, especially where resistance is a concern.
4. PCR Diagnostic Study for Aspergillus fumigatus
Study title: PCR for Aspergillus Fumigatus in Blood and Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid
Condition: Aspergillosis (diagnostic focus)
What it’s testing: A blood and lung fluid PCR test to improve early detection of aspergillosis.
Status: Recruiting
Official record: PCR Aspergillus fumigatus Diagnostic Trial on ClinicalTrials.gov
First posted: 2 January 2026
Why this matters: Early diagnosis increases the chance of successful treatment. A reliable PCR test could allow clinicians to start antifungal therapy sooner.
🔎 What Else Is Ongoing?
There are other studies that include aspergillosis patients or Aspergillus exposure as part of broader research, such as:
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All-of-Us Research Program fungal infection analysis — large observational work looking at fungal disease patterns in hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S., including aspergillosis. (Not a clinical trial per se but relevant to understanding how aspergillosis affects populations.)
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Historic or related trials — e.g., older isavuconazole comparisons (e.g., NCT00412893) exist but are not newly updated.
🧠 What This Means for Patients
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New antifungal drugs like olorofim and rezafungin are being tested in late-stage studies — these could expand treatment options in the future.
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Combination therapies (e.g., ibrexafungerp + voriconazole) are being assessed to tackle difficult or resistant infections.
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Improved diagnostics (e.g., PCR tests for Aspergillus fumigatus) are now being studied to help clinicians diagnose infections earlier and more accurately.
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Not all trials are about treatment — some focus on better ways to detect infection or understand disease patterns, which are important for prevention and clinical practice.
🗓 How to Use These Links
Clicking a trial link takes you to the official ClinicalTrials.gov page, where you can often see:
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Who can participate
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Locations and contact information
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Detailed eligibility criteria
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Sponsor and trial timelines
If you have questions about joining a trial or how it applies to you specifically, always discuss this with your healthcare team.
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