%0 Journal Article %A David J. Jackson %A Praveen Akuthota %A Florence Roufosse %T Eosinophils and eosinophilic immune dysfunction in health and disease %D 2022 %R 10.1183/16000617.0150-2021 %J European Respiratory Review %P 210150 %V 31 %N 163 %X The functions ascribed to eosinophils have classically been limited to host defence against certain parasitic infections and potentially deleterious effects in the setting of specific diseases that are associated with elevated eosinophil counts in blood and/or tissue. The ability to induce eosinophil depletion either experimentally in animal models or through targeted therapies in humans has extended our understanding of the roles played by eosinophils in health and homeostasis as well as in disease pathogenesis. When associated with human disease aetiology, the eosinophil takes on a pathogenic rather than a protective role. This maladaptive response, called “eosinophilic immune dysfunction” herein, appears central to exacerbation pathogenesis and disease control in severe asthma and may be involved in the aetiology of other eosinophil-related conditions ranging from organ-system-limited diseases such as phenotypic subsets of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis to more broadly systemic diseases such as eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis and hypereosinophilic syndrome. In this review, we describe the evidence supporting eosinophilic functions related to health and homeostasis and explore the contribution of eosinophilic immune dysfunction to human disease.The current era of therapies that specifically target eosinophils has yielded new insights into the functional significance of eosinophils in the maintenance of health and the effects of eosinophilic immune dysfunction on disease pathogenesis. https://bit.ly/3pVPLR5 %U https://err.ersjournals.com/content/errev/31/163/210150.full.pdf