Abstract

Aspergillus is one of the most common pathogens causing fungal allergy in the respiratory tract. Serum Aspergillus fumigatus-specific immunoglobulin G (Af-sIgG) levels have been used as a biomarker for the diagnosis and treatment response monitoring in airway allergic diseases such as allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and allergic fungal rhinosinusitis. However, its role in common primary chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) was unclear. This study aims to evaluate whether serum Af-sIgG level could serve as a biomarker for the disease presentation of primary CRS. We obtained serum Af-sIgG levels from patients diagnosed as bilateral primary CRS refractory to medical treatment and evaluated the correlations between serum Af-sIgG levels and disease severity in patients with type 2 (T2) and non-T2 CRS. Patients with T2 CRS exhibited significantly higher serum Af-sIgG levels than non-T2 CRS patients. The cut-off value of serum Af-sIgG in T2 CRS was 20.9 mg/L, with an odds ratio of 3.8 (95% CI 1.17-12.20, P = .026). Furthermore, serum Af-sIgG levels were positively correlated with symptom scores evaluated by the Sino-Nasal Outcome Test-22 (SNOT-22) scores in T2 patients (P = .009). While stratified by SNOT-22 total scores, patients with severe disease had higher serum Af-sIgG levels only in T2 CRS (P = .034). In individual domains of SNOT-22 analysis, serum Af-sIgG levels showed a significant correlation with "ear/facial" symptom scores in the T2 group (P < .001). Serum Af-sIgG levels may serve as a supplementary objective biomarker that correlates with identification and subjective measurements of T2 CRS, and may be associated with symptoms arising from Eustachian tube dysfunction.

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