Background: Abbreviated magnetic resonance imaging protocols have emerged to reduce the examination time of the long protocols eliminating unnecessary pulse sequences to answer a targeted clinical question, without compromising diagnostic information. Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of an abbreviated magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (A-MRCP) protocol in patients with suspected choledocholithiasis. Methods: This retrospective study evaluated patients (ages 10 + years) that performed consecutive MRCP examination from October 2019 to June 2020, with the clinical suspicion of choledocholithiasis. Readers first evaluated the biliary tree using a four-sequence A-MRCP protocol and later reviewed the entire conventional eleven-sequence MRCP. Presence of choledocholithiasis, stone size, common bile duct caliber, and additional findings were evaluated. Results: A total of 148 patients with MRCP were included (62.8% female, mean 50.9 years). The prevalence of choledocholithiasis was 32.2%. The accuracy of the abbreviated MRCP protocol for choledocholithiasis was 98.7%. There was no difference between the performance of the abbreviated and conventional MRCP image sets for detection of choledocholithiasis (kappa=0.970), with a sensitivity of 98% and a specificity of 99%. There was excellent inter-reader agreement evaluating for choledocholithiasis on both imaging sets of MRCP protocols (kappa values were 0.970). Conclusion: An abbreviated MRCP protocol to evaluate for choledocholithiasis provides similar diagnostic over the conventional MRCP protocol, offering potential for decreased scanning time and improved patient tolerability.
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