“…Most cases occur in middle-aged adults, with only a handful of cases ever reported in infancy, 1-3 and congenital presentation is even rarer, with only two cases ever reported before this patient. 4 The clinical presentation of the skin lesions is characteristically described as the appearance and evolution of discrete, atrophic, porcelain-white skin lesions with surrounding erythema and typical natural history, although lesions initially appear as pink papules on the trunk and extremities that umbilicate and then develop the characteristic porcelain white centers that can become necrotic or ulcerated. The morphologic differential diagnosis for these lesions includes progressive systemic sclerosis, cutaneous lupus erythematosus, and other medium-vessel vasculitides.…”