OBJECTIVE. The aim of our study was to determine the role of MR cholangiography in the noninvasive examination of patients with biliary-enteric anastomoses. SUBJECTS AND METHODS. Twenty-four patients (nine men and 15 women; mean age, 68.9 years old) with biliary-enteric anastomoses underwent MR cholangiography. We used a fat-suppressed three-dimensional turbo spin-echo sequence (3000/700 [TR/TE]; echo train length, 128) with no breath-hold, optimized with a 0.5-T magnet. Imaging studies were performed because of scheduled follow-up (five patients), persistent jaundice (six patients), cholangitis and abnormal liver function (eight patients), and a combination of transient jaundice, epigastric pain, and abnormal liver function (five patients). RESULTS. Image quality was graded from optimal to good in 21 (88%) of 24 cases and poor in three (13%) of 24 cases. The degree of bile duct dilatation was correctly assessed, with complete agreement between the two observers in al] cases. MR cholangiography correctly showed bile duct irregularities in six of the eight patients with cholangitis (kappa = .59), anastomotic strictures in all 19 patients with strictures (kappa = .86), and 3- to 15-mm stones in nine of 10 patients (kappa = .95). A slight overestimation of the strictures occurred in four of the 19 cases with strictures. CONCLUSION. MR cholangiography is a reliable imaging technique for the examination of patients with biliary-enteric anastomoses.