Abstract
Background: Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) may be the first clinical
sign of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). SCD individuals with normal cognition may already have
significant hippocampal atrophy, a well-known feature of AD.
Objective: To test the hypothesis that SCD, compared to healthy individuals
without SCD, have a pattern of hippocampal subfield atrophy similar to that measured in
the AD pathology.
Methods: 17 SCD, 21 AD, and 40 matched controls underwent a standard
T1-weighted MRI and a dedicated high-resolution MRI proton-density hippocampal sequence.
For each participant, three hippocampal regions-of-interest were manually delineated on
the proton-density hippocampal sequence corresponding to the CA1, subiculum, and other
(including CA2-3-4 and dentate gyrus) subfields. Total intracranial volume
(TIV)-normalized subfield volumes were compared between-group. Voxelwise group comparisons
assessed from the standard T1 MRI were also projected on 3D hippocampal surface views.
Results: Both patient groups showed significant TIV-normalized volume
decrease in hippocampus global volume and in CA1 and subiculum subfields as well as in the
other subfield in AD compared to controls. Significant differences were observed between
SCD and AD in hippocampus global TIV-normalized volume. Atrophy maps on hippocampal
surface showed major involvement of the lateral part (CA1) in both SCD and AD, with larger
overlap of other regions in AD.
Conclusion: The findings indicate topographically similar hippocampal
subfield changes in SCD individuals as those found in AD. This further highlights the
relevance of SCD recruited from a memory clinic in assessing predementia AD stages.