Primary cicatricial alopecia: Recent advances in evaluation and diagnosis based on trichoscopic and histopathological observation, including overlapping and specific features

Primary cicatricial alopecia (PCA) is a form of alopecia in which inflammatory cells target follicles, including the bulge region containing follicular stem cells, leading to permanent alopecia. New classifications of PCA subtypes have recently been proposed, including those that account for novel trichoscopic and histopathological features of PCA, enabling greater precision in the evaluation and diagnosis of this condition. Nonetheless, diagnosis remains challenging clinically and histopathologically because the etiology of PCA is multifactorial. Inconsistent use of terminology, overlapping disease concepts, and changes in the clinical or histopathological severity of inflammation in the disease course in the same patient also make diagnosis quite challenging. The present study comprehensively reviews recent progress in diagnostic techniques, including the use of clinical, trichoscopic, and histopathological features, in evaluating each PCA subtype, containing overlapping and specific features. Elucidating the features of PCA, including those that are common to multiple subtypes as well as specific to each in both early and advanced-stage lesions, is important for accurate diagnosis. Improving the evaluation and treatment of this disease depends on having a broader clinical understanding that takes into account not only the features of the disease at a given point in time, but also the changes that occur during the entire disease course.

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