• Neurology · Feb 2004

    Comparative Study

    Higher atrophy rate of entorhinal cortex than hippocampus in AD.

    • A T Du, N Schuff, J H Kramer, S Ganzer, X P Zhu, W J Jagust, B L Miller, B R Reed, D Mungas, K Yaffe, H C Chui, and M W Weiner.
    • Magnetic Resonance Unit, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA 94121, USA.
    • Neurology. 2004 Feb 10;62(3):422-7.

    ObjectivesTo determine if atrophy rates were higher for entorhinal cortex (ERC) than for hippocampus in Alzheimer disease (AD), to determine the relationship between hippocampal atrophy rate and memory impairment, and to compare atrophy rates of ERC and hippocampus in differentiating between patients with AD and cognitively normal (CN) controls.MethodsTwenty patients with AD and 25 CN subjects had MRI scans and clinical evaluations twice approximately 1.9 years apart. ERC volumes were measured manually and hippocampal volumes were measured semiautomatically on volumetric T1-weighted MR images.ResultsIn AD, the atrophy rate of ERC (7.1 +/- 3.2%/year) was higher (p < 0.02) than that of hippocampus (5.9 +/- 2.4%/year). Furthermore, memory deficit in mild AD, measured with the Delayed List Verbal Recall test, correlated significantly with atrophy rates of both ERC (r = -0.61) and hippocampus (r = -0.59). Atrophy rates of ERC and hippocampus were comparable in differentiating between AD and CN. Using atrophy rates of ERC or hippocampus to detect a 20% treatment effect with 90% power (p < 0.05) would require about 100 completed patients per arm in a 2-year study.ConclusionThe finding in AD that the atrophy rate in the entorhinal cortex is higher than in the hippocampus is consistent with the view that AD pathology begins in the entorhinal cortex.

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