OBJECTIVES: The splenial angle (SA), measured on axial DTI colour fractional anisotropy MRI, outperformed the callosal angle (CA) in predicting idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) patients from those with Alzheimer's dementia, Parkinson's disease (PD) and healthy controls (HC). We investigated its reliability and classification performance on more commonly acquired T1 MPRAGE and FLAIR images. METHODS: SA was measured on axial MPRAGE and FLAIR images in 57 subjects (19 NPH, PD and HC each) by two raters, and compared across groups. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis was used to assess its classification performance differentiating NPH from non-NPH groups, in comparison to the CA. RESULTS: Inter-rater reliability for SA were excellent (intraclass correlation coefficients ≥0.91). SA was effective in differentiating NPH from non-NPH patients on MPRAGE and FLAIR images (p <
0.001). Its ROC curves showed excellent performance classifying NPH from HC (AUC 1) and PD (AUC >
0.93) groups, and were highly comparable to those for CA (1
0.947). Angles wider than 60° and narrower than 45° robustly (100%) excluded and predicted NPH from HC, respectively. The narrower 45° cutoff yielded better sensitivity (84.2-89.5%) in differentiating NPH from PD patients. CONCLUSIONS: The SA on MPRAGE/FLAIR images showed excellent inter-rater reliability and classification performance predicting NPH from non-NPH groups, rivalling those of the CA. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE: The SA on MPRAGE and FLAIR images is reproducible and shows excellent diagnostic performance differentiating NPH from non-NPH groups, with potential to replace the CA in NPH screening given its accessibility on routine axial neuroimaging.