“…grouped PD-1 expression in follicular helper T-cells [18] Surgical excision; radiotherapy; intralesional corticosteroids; chemotherapy [18] High cure rates from excision and radiotherapy [18] CLH Mostly young adults [1,11]; female predominance [1,9] Single or multiple red-brown or violet papules or nodules [9,11]; common sites: head and neck [1,8,11] Nodular or diffuse dermal infiltrate with lymphoid follicles and reactive germinal centers [9,11]; admixed histiocytes, plasma cells, and eosinophils [9] Predominance of T-cells, B-cells, or a near equal mixture of both; reactive germinal centers: BCL-6+, CD10+, BCL-2- [11] Corticosteroids; surgical excision; radiotherapy; immunosuppressants [11] Benign [1,11]; lesions may resolve spontaneously after months or years [9]; treatment of underlying disease or instigating agent can be curative [11] TABLE 1: Differential diagnosis of TRAPP.…”