Aspergillosis is an umbrella term for a group of diseases caused by infection or hypersensitivity to fungi in the Aspergillus genus, most commonly Aspergillus fumigatus. The spectrum of disease ranges from benign colonisation to aggressive, life-threatening invasive infection, depending on the host’s immune status and pre-existing lung condition.
🔍 Main Forms of Aspergillosis
| Type | Description | Typical Host |
|---|---|---|
| Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA) | A hypersensitivity reaction to A. fumigatus in the airways, with airway inflammation and mucus plugging | Asthma or cystic fibrosis patients |
| Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA) | Long-term infection of damaged lung tissue; may form cavities, fibrosis, or fungal balls (aspergilloma) | Patients with COPD, TB history, sarcoidosis, or bronchiectasis |
| Aspergilloma | A fungal ball within a lung cavity, often seen in CPA | Pre-existing lung cavity from TB or sarcoidosis |
| Invasive Aspergillosis (IA) | Rapid tissue-invasive fungal infection, often bloodstream dissemination | Immunocompromised hosts (neutropenia, transplant, high-dose steroids, haematological malignancy) |
| Sinopulmonary and Disseminated Aspergillosis | Involvement of sinuses, CNS, bone, or multiple organs | Usually in immunocompromised or advanced disease |
| Allergic Aspergillus Sinusitis (AAS) | Similar to ABPA but in the sinuses | Atopic individuals, often with nasal polyposis |
👥 Who Is Vulnerable?
Risk varies by form:
1. ABPA
-
Adults or children with moderate-to-severe asthma
-
Patients with cystic fibrosis
2. CPA / Aspergilloma
-
Structural lung disease: TB scarring, COPD, sarcoidosis, bronchiectasis
-
Immune dysregulation: diabetes, corticosteroid use
3. Invasive Aspergillosis
-
Neutropenic patients (especially haematological malignancies)
-
Solid organ or stem cell transplant recipients
-
Chronic granulomatous disease
-
ICU patients (especially with influenza or COVID-19)
⚠️ Main Symptoms and Diagnostic Red Flags
| Symptom | Suggestive Of |
|---|---|
| Persistent cough, often productive | ABPA or CPA |
| Wheeze, breathlessness, chest tightness | ABPA |
| Haemoptysis (mild to severe) | Aspergilloma, CPA, sometimes ABPA |
| Weight loss, fatigue, night sweats | CPA or IA |
| Facial pain, nasal discharge | Aspergillus sinusitis |
| Fever, hypoxia, sepsis signs | Invasive aspergillosis |
🧪 Diagnosis
📌 ABPA
-
Elevated total IgE (>1000 IU/mL)
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Raised Aspergillus-specific IgE/IgG
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Eosinophilia
-
Chest CT: central bronchiectasis, mucus impaction (“finger-in-glove”)
-
Positive sputum culture or PCR for A. fumigatus
📌 CPA
-
Symptoms >3 months
-
Chest imaging: cavitary lesions, fungal ball, pleural thickening
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Positive Aspergillus IgG
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Repeated positive cultures/PCR from sputum or BAL
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Exclusion of TB and other mimics
📌 Invasive Aspergillosis
-
Imaging: halo sign, air crescent sign on CT
-
Serum galactomannan, (1→3)-β-D-glucan, PCR
-
BAL galactomannan and culture
-
Tissue biopsy (definitive)
💊 Treatment Approaches
🟦 ABPA
-
Oral corticosteroids (mainstay)
-
Itraconazole or posaconazole to reduce fungal burden
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Biologics (e.g. omalizumab, mepolizumab, benralizumab) in steroid-dependent or resistant cases
🟧 CPA
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Long-term triazole antifungals (e.g. itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole)
-
Monitoring of serum drug levels, liver function
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Surgical resection in selected cases (aspergilloma)
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Inhaled amphotericin B in refractory cases
🟥 Invasive Aspergillosis
-
Voriconazole (first-line)
-
Liposomal amphotericin B (alternative)
-
Duration: typically 6–12 weeks
-
Manage immunosuppression, treat underlying disease
🧭 Monitoring and Follow-up
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Serial imaging (CT or X-ray)
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Aspergillus IgG/IgE titers
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Liver function and antifungal serum levels
-
Patient-reported symptom scores and quality of life
📚 Further Information and Resources
-
National Aspergillosis Centre (NAC): aspergillosis.org,
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UK Clinical Guidelines: BTS CPA Guidelines (2016), ERS ABPA position paper (2020)
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Support Groups: NAC Patient Support Facebook Group, Aspergillosis Trust
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Referral Pathway: Respiratory teams can refer to NAC via NHS e-Referral system or Advice & Guidance. NAC is a tertiary NHS service so referrals cannot be made by a GP.
- When ‘chest infections’ don’t respond: when to suspect ABPA or CPA (Clinical perspective)
- AntifungalInteractions.org – A Specialist Resource for Safer Antifungal Treatment
- Aspergillosis and Diet: coping with weight loss, poor appetite, food avoidance and stomach symptoms
- Cystic Fibrosis, CFTR Gene Variants, and Aspergillosis
- Weekly Aspergillosis Research Update: 31 March – 7 April 2026
- Voriconazole interactions: what patients need to know
- Itraconazole interactions: what patients need to know
- Amphotericin B interactions: what patients need to know
- Isavuconazole interactions: what patients need to know
- Posaconazole interactions: what patients need to know
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