Rationale and ObjectivesIdentifying intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) patients who are at high risk for early recurrence (ER) can guide personalized treatment strategy and improve survival. This study aimed to investigate the value of preoperative MRI, especially diffusion-weighted imaging, in predicting ER, including in patients receiving neoadjuvant therapy. Materials and methodsThis study included 175 pathologically-confirmed iCCA patients who underwent curative resection (114 men, 61 women; mean age 59.0±9.56 years). MRI features, particularly apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), were analyzed and compared between ER and non-ER cases. Survival analyses of ER were evaluated using Cox regression and Kaplan-Meier analysis. ResultsER occurred in 54.3% (95/175) of patients. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified tumor ADC as the only independent predictor of ER (odds ratio=0.034, P<0.001), with AUCs of 0.758 (95%CI 0.664, 0.836) in the testing cohort and 0.779 (95%CI 0.622, 0.893) in the validation cohort. The optimal ADC threshold was 1.273×10-3mm2/s. Tumor ADC was comparable to the AJCC 8th staging system in predicting ER (AUC 0.758 vs 0.650 in testing cohort and 0.779 vs 0.661 in validation cohort). Multivariate Cox analysis identified high tumor burden score (HR=1.109, P=0.009), non-smooth margin (HR=2.265, P=0.008) and tumor ADC (HR=0.111, P<0.001) as independent risk factors for ER. Lower ADC values were linked to shorter RFS in both testing and validation cohorts (P<0.001 and 0.0219), as well as in patients receiving neoadjuvant therapy (P=0.003). ConclusionPreoperative MRI, particularly ADC, can help predict ER in iCCA, regardless of the application of neoadjuvant therapy, comparable to the AJCC 8th staging system.