my dht22 has been used for literal years, still reads the same as my analogue (hair and needle) meter which I calibrate regularly using nearby university reports ( they have a big display showing the same at their entrance, as a novelty.)
The thing about sensors is, the problem might not always be where you think it is. What if your reference is incorrect but the sensor is OK?
Even a little bit of organic material ingressing into your probe can make our sensor laggy or make it read higher. (actually had this problem when I was using a wooden housing for my sensor and every time it rained, the sensor read 99% for a whole day, while the one without housing dropped to 85% immediately.
it got as responsive as it can be when I switched to using plastic enclosure.