Hippocampal Volume Reductions in Key Regions and Their Role in Disease Progression in Adolescents at High Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Findings From the sBEAD Cohort
- PMID: 40033571
- DOI: 10.1111/bdi.70014
Hippocampal Volume Reductions in Key Regions and Their Role in Disease Progression in Adolescents at High Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Findings From the sBEAD Cohort
Abstract
Background: Hippocampal subfield pathology is established in bipolar disorder (BD); yet no studies have investigated these alterations in adolescents at clinical high risk for BD (MDD-Sub), which is a critical gap given adolescence as a neurodevelopmental window for early intervention.
Methods: We analyzed baseline 3D T1-weighted MRI data from 72 adolescents at Clinical High Risk for BD "MDD-Sub"MDD-Sub vs. MDD-nSub, 74 pure adolescents with MDD (MDD-nSub), and 72 healthy adolescents (HC) aged 12-18 years in the sBEAD cohort. Hippocampal subfields were segmented using FreeSurfer 7.3.1. All patients were followed up for at least 12 months to ensure that no participants progressed to schizophrenia or developed new manic symptoms in the MDD-nSub group.
Results: MDD-Sub exhibited significant volume reductions in the left cornu ammonis (CA)1, CA3, CA4, molecular layer (ML) and dentate gyrus (DG) even after controlling for medication effects (dHc Vs. Mdd-sub = 0.70-0.78; dMDD-Sub vs. MDD-nSub = 0.50-0.61). Strikingly, illness duration > 1 year predicted volumetric increases in bilateral CA1/ML/DG and left CA3/CA4 (R2 = 0.13-0.21, p < 0.05), replicated in medication-naïve MDD-Sub (n = 32). MDD-nSub showed no subfield differences versus HC and MDD-Sub.
Conclusions: This first hippocampal subfield study in BD high-risk adolescents suggests that prodromal-specific left CA1, CA3, CA4, ML, and DG atrophy may help differentiate BD risk from unipolar depression, while nonlinear volumetric trajectories, characterized by early reductions followed by compensatory increases with prolonged illness duration, provide new perspectives on classical neurodegeneration paradigms. These findings provide initial biological support for stage-specific interventions, enhancing neuroplasticity pre-conversion versus neuroprotection post-conversion.
Keywords: BD high‐risk; adolescents depression; hippocampal subfields; neuroplasticity; sBEAD cohort; subthreshold mania.
© 2025 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
References
-
- A. Nierenberg, B. Agustini, O. Köhler‐Forsberg, et al., “Diagnosis and Treatment of Bipolar Disorder: A Review,” Journal of the American Medical Association 330, no. 14 (2023): 1370–1380.
-
- E. Vieta, E. Salagre, I. Grande, et al., “Early Intervention in Bipolar Disorder,” American Journal of Psychiatry 5, no. 175 (2018): 411–426.
-
- L. F. Gianni, J. B. Ross, M. Ciro, et al., “An International Society of Bipolar Disorders Task Force Report: Precursors and Prodromes of Bipolar Disorder,” Bipolar Disorders 21, no. 8 (2019): 720–740.
-
- M. Hauser and C. Correll, “The Significance of At‐Risk or Prodromal Symptoms for Bipolar I Disorder in Children and Adolescents,” Canadian Journal of Psychiatry / Revue Canadienne de Psychiatrie 58, no. 1 (2013): 22–31.
-
- C. Philippe, W. Janine, T. H. Karen, et al., “The Proximal Prodrome to First Episode Mania—A New Target for Early Intervention,” Bipolar Disorders 10, no. 5 (2008): 555–565.
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
- 2022ZD0211700/STI 2030-Major projects
- 82371538/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- 2024A1515010705/Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation
- 2023A03J0847/Guangzhou Science and Technology Bureau, Municipal (enterprise) and Institute
- 2023A03J0838/Guangzhou Science and Technology Bureau, Municipal (enterprise) and Institute
- 2024A03J0219/Guangzhou Science and Technology Bureau, Municipal (enterprise) and Institute
- 2024A03J0298/Guangzhou Science and Technology Bureau, Municipal (enterprise) and Institute
- 02-408-2304-19085XM/Guangzhou Medical University Student Innovation Capability Enhancement Program Project
- Guangzhou Research-oriented Hospital
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous