Abstract
Objective
Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) is classified radiologically as serologic ABPA (ABPA-S) or ABPA with central bronchiectasis (ABPA-CB). This retrospective case series study aimed to describe and compare the clinical characteristics of both forms of ABPA.
Methods
Patients with ABPA treated in the hospital between February 2011 and June 2019 were enrolled and were divided into ABPA-S and ABPA-CB groups based on whether their cases were complicated with central bronchiectasis. Demographic data, symptoms, laboratory values, comorbidities, and image findings were collected. ABPA-S patients were followed up retrospectively through medical records.
Results
Ninety-three (93) patients were enrolled, including 74 ABPA-CB patients and 19 ABPA-S patients. The most common predisposing condition was asthma (36.6%), with a median course of 30 years (IQR 13–42.5) prior to ABPA diagnosis. Patients of 54.8% had been misdiagnosed, with ABPA-S more likely than ABPA-CB to have been misdiagnosed as asthma (p < 0.01). Obstructive ventilation dysfunction and mixed ventilation dysfunction were found in 21 patients (22.6%) and 16 patients (17.2%), respectively. Compared with ABPA-S, ABPA-CB had a higher median blood eosinophil count (880 vs. 700 cells/μl), serum IgE (2957 vs. 2616 IU/ml), and Aspergillus fumigatus specific-IgE (20.6 vs. 7.31 kUA/L), although these findings were not statistically significant. Three ABPA-S patients developed bronchiectasis during follow-up and experienced relapses more than twice.
Conclusions
Our findings suggested that the clinical characteristics between ABPA-CB and ABPA-S were mostly similar. ABPA-S had a relatively lower immunological activity level than ABPA-CB but was still immunologically active and could develop bronchiectasis.