Nowadays, the management of chronic obstructive airway diseases is shifting from traditional diagnostic labels toward a precision medicine approach based on “treatable traits.” Among these, blood eosinophilia is emerging as a biomarker of type 2 (T2) inflammation across asthma and chronic obstructive airway diseases (COPD), even if its role as diagnostic tool and therapeutic target remains debated. In this manuscript we presented a clinical case of a 60-year-old male, former mild smoker (5 p/y), initially diagnosed with severe COPD with persistent airflow limitation, frequent severe exacerbations and persistent eosinophilia, but a history of asthma and nasal polyposis.
After six months with optimization of inhaled therapy and clinical reassessment, the diagnosis of “severe COPD” shifted to the diagnosis of “severe eosinophilic asthma”. Considering the new diagnosis, he was prescribed mepolizumab on top of triple inhaled therapy.
After 1 year, the clinical response was excellent in terms of symptoms control, exacerbations reduction and OCS sparing, despite no improvement in lung function.
Frontiers in Immunology published a clinical update in Infectious Disease on 01 Jun 2026.
The item focuses on Is blood eosinophilia a treatable trait in chronic obstructive airway diseases?.
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