PurposeTo evaluate the safety and effectiveness of large-bore percutaneous biliary access techniques for cholangioscopy-assisted gallstone extraction in patients with a history of acute calculous cholecystitis who are poor surgical candidates. Materials and MethodsA retrospective analysis was conducted on patients who underwent percutaneous cholangioscopy for gallstone extraction using large-bore access (24 or 30 F) at 2 large academic centers from September 2020 and August 2022. Technical success, procedure duration, fluoroscopy time, immediate postprocedural symptom reduction, 3-month symptom-free outcomes, and adverse effects were assessed. ResultsThirty consecutive patients were included. Gallstone removal in a single cholangioscopy session was successful in 93.3% of cases. Large-bore access facilitated the removal of gallstones ranging from 0.5 to 4 cm in diameter, with mean procedure and fluoroscopy times of 105.4 minutes and 21.7 minutes, respectively. This compares with a previous small cholangioscopy study of 13 patients demonstrating mean procedure and fluoroscopy times of 164 minutes and 30 minutes, respectively. All patients who presented for 3-month follow-up remained symptom-free without gallstone recurrence on imaging. The overall adverse event rate was 6.7%, 1 Grade C and 1 Grade D based on the Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR) adverse event grading system, both managed appropriately, leading to patient discharge home. ConclusionsLarge-bore percutaneous biliary access for cholangioscopy-assisted gallstone extraction is a safe and effective technique for managing symptomatic cholelithiasis in poor surgical candidates. Further prospective studies are warranted to validate these findings and evaluate long-term treatment outcomes.