Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a heterogeneous inflammatory syndrome of the sinonasal mucosa that is imperfectly captured by phenotypes with or without nasal polyps. Since allergic rhinitis (AR) and atopy often occur alongside CRS, the term “allergic CRS” is commonly used. However, it is uncertain whether this term indicates a specific allergen-related, IgE-mediated endotype or merely represents a clinical overlap. We synthesize epidemiologic data, mucosal immunobiology, epithelial barrier dysfunction, and host–microbe interactions that can generate IgE-rich type 2 inflammation in CRS. We propose an operational entity test (objective CRS; clinically relevant allergy; evidence of IgE relevance in target tissue; exposure–response patterns; and differential response to allergy-directed interventions) to guide hypothesis testing rather than diagnosis. Using this framework, allergic fungal rhinosinusitis and central compartment atopic disease emerge as the clearest clinical prototypes where allergen contact patterns and IgE relevance plausibly contribute to disease expression. In contrast, microbial superantigens and other non-allergen stimuli can drive local IgE amplification, limiting the specificity of systemic sensitization as a causal marker. We discuss therapeutic implications, including biologics targeting type 2 pathways and epithelial alarmin blockade, and outline research priorities for endotype-resolved cohorts and mechanism-informed trials to test whether allergic CRS should evolve from a heuristic descriptor into a validated endotype.
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George N. Konstantinou
Konstantinos Petalas
Hellenic Air Force
Allergies
Hellenic Air Force
424 General Military Hospital
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Konstantinou et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07e582f7e8953b7cbf4ef — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/allergies6020014