4.5 Article

Augmented Reality during Open Liver Surgery Using a Markerless Non-rigid Registration System

期刊

JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY
卷 25, 期 3, 页码 662-671

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11605-020-04519-4

关键词

Augmented reality; Liver resection; Non-rigid registration; RGB-D camera

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This study aimed to evaluate the clinical feasibility and anatomical accuracy of a new vision-based augmented reality (AR) technology in liver resection surgery. Tests were successfully conducted in vivo with a fast and agile setup, and ex vivo experiments showed a 7.9 mm root mean square error for internal landmark registration. Future larger prospective studies are needed to confirm the impact of this minimally invasive technology on pathological margins and oncological outcomes.
Introduction Intraoperative navigation during liver resection remains difficult and requires high radiologic skills because liver anatomy is complex and patient-specific. Augmented reality (AR) during open liver surgery could be helpful to guide hepatectomies and optimize resection margins but faces many challenges when large parenchymal deformations take place. We aimed to experiment a new vision-based AR to assess its clinical feasibility and anatomical accuracy. Patients and Methods Based on preoperative CT scan 3-D segmentations, we applied a non-rigid registration method, integrating a physics-based elastic model of the liver, computed in real time using an efficient finite element method. To fit the actual deformations, the model was driven by data provided by a single RGB-D camera. Five livers were considered in this experiment. In vivo AR was performed during hepatectomy (n = 4), with manual handling of the livers resulting in large realistic deformations. Ex vivo experiment (n = 1) consisted in repeated CT scans of explanted whole organ carrying internal metallic landmarks, in fixed deformations, and allowed us to analyze our estimated deformations and quantify spatial errors. Results In vivo AR tests were successfully achieved in all patients with a fast and agile setup installation (< 10 min) and real-time overlay of the virtual anatomy onto the surgical field displayed on an external screen. In addition, an ex vivo quantification demonstrated a 7.9 mm root mean square error for the registration of internal landmarks. Conclusion These first experiments of a markerless AR provided promising results, requiring very little equipment and setup time, yet providing real-time AR with satisfactory 3D accuracy. These results must be confirmed in a larger prospective study to definitively assess the impact of such minimally invasive technology on pathological margins and oncological outcomes.

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