Author:
Cortese Rosa,Battaglini Marco,Stromillo Maria Laura,Luchetti Ludovico,Leoncini Matteo,Gentile Giordano,Gasparini Daniele,Plantone Domenico,Altieri Manuela,D’Ambrosio Alessandro,Gallo Antonio,Giannì Costanza,Piervincenzi Claudia,Pantano Patrizia,Pagani Elisabetta,Valsasina Paola,Preziosa Paolo,Tedone Nicolo’,Rocca Maria Assunta,Filippi Massimo,De Stefano Nicola, ,Bisecco Alvino,Esposito Fabrizio,De Rosa Alessandro,Ruggieri Serena,Tommasin Silvia,Petsas Nikolaos,Storelli Loredana,Sala Stefania
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Research work has shown that hippocampal subfields are atrophic to varying extents in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. However, studies examining the functional implications of subfield-specific hippocampal damage in early MS are limited. We aim to gain insights into the relationship between hippocampal atrophy and memory function by investigating the correlation between global and regional hippocampal atrophy and memory performance in early MS patients.
Methods
From the Italian Neuroimaging Network Initiative (INNI) dataset, we selected 3D-T1-weighted brain MRIs of 219 early relapsing remitting (RR)MS and 246 healthy controls (HC) to identify hippocampal atrophic areas. At the time of MRI, patients underwent Selective-Reminding-Test (SRT) and Spatial-Recall-Test (SPART) and were classified as mildly (MMI-MS: n.110) or severely (SMI-MS: n:109) memory impaired, according to recently proposed cognitive phenotypes.
Results
Early RRMS showed lower hippocampal volumes compared to HC (p < 0.001), while these did not differ between MMI-MS and SMI-MS. In MMI-MS, lower hippocampal volumes correlated with worse memory tests (r = 0.23–0.37, p ≤ 0.01). Atrophic voxels were diffuse in the hippocampus but more prevalent in cornu ammonis (CA, 79%) than in tail (21%). In MMI-MS, decreased subfield volumes correlated with decreases in memory, particularly in the right CA1 (SRT-recall: r = 0.38; SPART: r = 0.34, p < 0.01). No correlations were found in the SMI-MS group.
Conclusion
Hippocampal atrophy spreads from CA to tail from early disease stages. Subfield hippocampal atrophy is associated with memory impairment in MMI-MS, while this correlation is lost in SMI-MS. This plays in favor of a limited capacity for an adaptive functional reorganization of the hippocampi in MS patients.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Siena
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC