Abstract
The 2026 report from the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) introduces substantial conceptual and practical updates to the management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. While maintaining the established spirometric definition, the report emphasizes early diagnosis, multi-dimensional assessment, and personalized treatment strategies that move beyond a spirometry-centric approach. Key innovations include formally recognizing disease activity as a therapeutic target, refining the ABE classification with a lower threshold for patients prone to exacerbations (Group E), and integrating blood eosinophil counts to guide inhaled corticosteroid therapy. Nonpharmacologic interventions, such as pulmonary rehabilitation, vaccination, smoking cessation, structured self-management, and post-exacerbation care, are elevated to core disease-modifying strategies. Pharmacological escalation is structured around dual bronchodilation as the preferred initial step, with further intensification to biomarker-guided triple therapy, including inhaled corticosteroids or other anti-inflammatory agents, reserved for selected patients who remain symptomatic or experience exacerbations despite optimized dual therapy. GOLD 2026 also introduces biologics, dupilumab and mepolizumab, as an add-on therapy for exacerbation-prone eosinophilic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. However, it also highlights ongoing limitations in efficacy, cost effectiveness, and generalizability. Artificial intelligence and emerging digital technologies are recognized as promising adjuncts in the management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, though their clinical implementation remains preliminary. Overall, GOLD 2026 advances precision medicine in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by combining structured individualized assessments with early targeted interventions. However, significant uncertainties remain, including biological variability of biomarkers, limited evidence for emerging therapies, and barriers to equitable access to nonpharmacologic and advanced interventions. Careful context-sensitive application and continued validation are essential.