Aspergillus fumigatus Allergen Facts, Symptoms, and Treatment
Learn more about common allergic diseases, symptoms, management paradigms, and testing considerations.
Is your patient a candidate for specific IgE testing?
Get detailed information on whole allergens and allergen components.
Ready to test a patient?
Learn more about common allergic diseases, symptoms, management paradigms, and testing considerations.
Is your patient a candidate for specific IgE testing?
Get detailed information on whole allergens and allergen components.
Ready to test a patient?
Found worldwide, Aspergillus fumigatus can colonize in the bronchial tracts of asthmatics, causing severe asthma and low lung functions and sometimes leading to severe conditions.
Within the larger Aspergillus genus, Aspergillus fumigatus is typically blue-green to gray in color with a woolly or cotton-like texture.3 Although Aspergillus is considered a seasonal outdoor mold that's often found on decaying vegetation, it can also colonize indoor environments such as air-conditioning systems, and it's one of the three most common indoor airborne fungi (along with Penicillium and Cladosporium).1,4,5 Aspergillus requires minimal moisture, and some species tolerate very dry conditions. As such, Aspergillus can grow rapidly in areas that can't support other molds. It produces small, dry, and easily aerosolized spores, which make them a significant indoor air contaminant.7 If you're allergic to Aspergillus fumigatus, you may experience symptoms after inhaling its spores.8
Aspergillus fumigatus can grow both indoors and outside.6 Outdoors it prefers environments such as soil, decomposing leaves, bird droppings, compost, wood chips, hay, stored grains and sweet potatoes, and hay and other crops.3,14 However, mold reproduces via spores, which can be transported by air, water, and insects.9,15 So even if a fungus originates outdoors, it often can enter a dwelling through a variety of means, including doorways, windows, vents, and heating and air conditioning systems.16 Aspergillus can grow on indoor surfaces such as ventilation ducts, floors, walls, potted plants, and household dust, and it's often found on foods rich in starch, such as rice, cereal, and bread. However, it has also been known to invade cereal grains and grow on processed and cured meats.3
It grows optimally in temps 37 to 43 C (roughly 99 to 109 F), but it can tolerate temps of 12 to 57 C (approximately 54 to 135 F).14 While Aspergillus fumigatus has almost worldwide distribution, in-home prevalence varies widely. For example, in the United States it was found in the air of 2.9 percent of homes in Southern California, but it was measured in 4.5 percent of homes in the Netherlands.17
Some people with Aspergillus fumigatus allergy may also experience symptoms when exposed to other types of mold. This is called cross-reactivity and occurs when your body's immune system identifies the proteins, or components, in different substances as being structurally similar or biologically related, thus triggering a response.1
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If you are allergic to mold, your healthcare provider may recommend a plan that includes the following.8,9,20,21
Your healthcare provider may direct you to take one of the following medications to improve your allergy symptoms:
Mold allergy symptoms can range from mild to severe and vary person to person.8 Reactions can happen almost immediately after exposure, or they can be delayed. Symptoms are most common in mid-summer to early fall, but since molds grow both indoors and out, allergic reactions can occur all year.9
Symptoms typically include one or more of the following:8,10
Mold sensitization is also a major risk factor for developing upper and lower respiratory diseases such as allergic rhinitis (aka hay fever) and allergic asthma.4,5
Aspergillus fumigatus can also colonize in the bronchial tracts of asthmatics, causing severe asthma and low lung functions, sometimes leading to severe conditions called allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) and allergic bronchopulmonary mycoses (ABPM).1 The condition involves both an allergic and inflammatory response to mold, and symptoms may include severe wheezing, coughing, shortness of breath, fever, weakness/malaise, and cough producing brown flecks or bloody mucus.2 In fact, Aspergillus fumigatus is the most frequent cause of 80 percent of all Aspergillus-related conditions including asthma, allergic sinusitis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, severe asthma with fungal sensitization (SAFS), and ABPA.11 In terms of prevalence, ABPA has been reported to occur in up to 40 percent of individuals with chronic asthma and up to 10 percent of those with cystic fibrosis.12
In addition, other reactions to Aspergillus can include hypersensitivity pneumonitis (also known as extrinsic allergic alveolitis), which can lead to a chronic disease with irreversible lung damage. 5
A small percentage of asthmatics with inhaled mold allergy can also develop allergic urticaria (aka hives) when they eat or drink anything containing yeast or mold.13 In addition to causing allergic reactions, molds can lead to infections along with toxic reactions.14
Together with your symptom history, skin-prick testing or specific IgE blood testing can help determine if you are allergic to a particular allergen. If you are diagnosed with an allergy, your healthcare provider will work with you to create a management plan.
*These products may not be approved for clinical use in your country. Please work with your healthcare provider to understand availability.
Exposure and sensitization to Aspergillus fumigatus can promote the development and worsening of allergic diseases such as allergic rhinitis, asthma, and the severe condition allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA). Your specific risk profile depends on which proteins you are allergic to.1
Knowing the proteins, or components, within each allergen that are triggering your symptoms can help guide your management plan. With that in mind, and based on your symptom history, your healthcare provider may suggest something called a specific IgE component test, which can help reveal your potential risk profile.1
Already have your specific IgE component test results?
Your component test results will include the name of the components (a series of letters and numbers). Your healthcare provider will likely review the results with you, but here you'll find an at-a-glance breakdown you can use as a reference. Simply match the component names to the list below to see what they mean in terms of symptom management.1,18,19
rAsp f 1
rAsp f 2, rAsp f 4
rAsp f 3
rAsp f 6
*These products may not be approved for clinical use in your country. Please work with your healthcare provider to understand availability.