RESUMEN
Background and study aims The etiology of idiopathic acute pancreatitis (IAP) should always be defined. Our aim was to compare the diagnostic value of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) versus secretin-enhanced magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (S-MRCP) in patients with IAP. Patients and Methods Patients admitted to a single tertiary care University hospital with IAP were invited to participate in the study. Enrolled patients underwent EUS and S-MRCP in a single-blinded comparative study. EUS and S-MRCP were performed no sooner than 4 weeks after discharge. The diagnostic yield of EUS and S-MRCP and demographic variables were included in the analysis. Additional follow-up, results of subsequent serology, radiographic exams, and relevant histological analysis were considered in determination of the final diagnosis. Results A total of 34 patients were enrolled; EUS was normal in six, cholelithiasis was defined in 15, choledocholithiasis in two, pancreas divisum in three, branch-type intraductal papillary mucinous tumor (IPMT) in three, and chronic pancreatitis in five. S-MRCP identified choledocholithiasis in one, divisum in four, branch-type IPMT in three, chronic pancreatitis in two; 24 subjects diagnosed as normal by S-MRCP. Diagnostic correlation between EUS and S-MRCP was slight (kappaâ=â0.236, 95â% confidence interval: 0.055-0.416). EUS provided a statistically significantly higher diagnostic yield than S-MRCP: 79.4â% (CI95â%: 65â%-94â%) vs 29.4â% (CI95â%: 13â%-46â%) (Pâ=â0.0002). The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of EUS and S-MRCP were 90â%, 80â%, 96â%, 57â% and 33â%, 100â%, 100â% and 16â%, respectively. Conclusion The diagnostic yield of EUS is higher than S-MRCP in patients with IAP.