“…117 Predicting asthma subtypes A simplistic view of asthma or any other allergic disorder that focuses entirely on T H 2 polarization and activation of allergy related cells, such as mast cells, basophils, and eosinophils, fails to take account of locally acting genetic and environmental factors that are required to translate the atopic phenotype in a specific organ to create disease. 116 In addition, the limited efficacy of biologic agents targeting individual T-cell receptors, such as CD25, 118 IL-5, 119,120 and TNF-a, 121 indicate that although individual patients might benefit from such therapies, they form only a small subgroup of the whole disease spectrum. Thus the concept is emerging of subphenotypes of asthma driven by differing gene-environment interactions.…”