Nasal Cytology as a Cellular Window into Epithelial Dysfunction and Type 2 Inflammation: From Mechanisms to Translational Implications
Matteo Gelardi

TL;DR
Nasal cytology offers a minimally invasive way to study epithelial dysfunction and inflammation in chronic airway diseases like nasal polyps.
Contribution
The paper highlights nasal cytology as a novel translational tool for understanding and managing type 2 inflammation in chronic rhinosinusitis.
Findings
Nasal cytology reveals distinct inflammatory patterns linked to CRSwNP immunopathology.
Cytological profiles correlate with disease severity and response to treatment.
The technique supports personalized medicine by bridging epithelial biology and immune profiling.
Abstract
Epithelial barrier dysfunction is increasingly recognized as a central pathogenic mechanism in chronic inflammatory airway diseases characterized by type 2 immune responses. Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) represents a paradigmatic condition in which structural epithelial alterations, impaired barrier integrity, and sustained release of epithelial-derived alarmins interact with innate and adaptive immune pathways to drive persistent inflammation and tissue remodeling. In this context, understanding disease heterogeneity requires tools capable of capturing cellular and immunological complexity beyond purely molecular or symptom-based classifications. Nasal cytology is a standardized, minimally invasive, and repeatable technique that provides direct in vivo assessment of epithelial morphology and inflammatory cell infiltrates at the mucosal surface. By identifying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSinusitis and nasal conditions · Allergic Rhinitis and Sensitization · Cystic Fibrosis Research Advances
