AI Article Synopsis

  • Image-guided surgery (IGS) provides precise real-time location of vital structures during procedures, but previous systems lacked methods for updating positioning after kidney manipulation in robotic partial nephrectomy (PN).
  • The authors introduce a technique for seamless reregistration during IGS, tested on two kidney phantoms with different tumor types, utilizing the da Vinci Xi robot for digitizing surfaces and marking fiducial points.
  • Results showed improved accuracy before and after tumor removal, with minimal increases in target registration error (TRE), demonstrating the effectiveness of their reregistration approach in maintaining precision during surgery.

Article Abstract

Image-guided surgery (IGS) allows for accurate, real-time localization of subsurface critical structures during surgery. No prior IGS systems have described a feasible method of intraoperative reregistration after manipulation of the kidney during robotic partial nephrectomy (PN). We present a method for seamless reregistration during IGS and evaluate accuracy before and after tumor resection in two validated kidney phantoms. We performed robotic PN on two validated kidney phantoms-one with an endophytic tumor and one with an exophytic tumor-with our IGS system utilizing the da Vinci Xi robot. Intraoperatively, the kidney phantoms' surfaces were digitized with the da Vinci robotic manipulator via a touch-based method and registered to a three-dimensional segmented model created from cross-sectional CT imaging of the phantoms. Fiducial points were marked with a surgical marking pen and identified after the initial registration using the robotic manipulator. Segmented images were displayed via picture-in-picture in the surgeon console as tumor resection was performed. After resection, reregistration was performed by reidentifying the fiducial points. The accuracy of the initial registration and reregistration was compared. The root mean square (RMS) averages of target registration error (TRE) were 2.53 and 4.88 mm for the endophytic and exophytic phantoms, respectively. IGS enabled resection along preplanned contours. Specifically, the RMS averages of the normal TRE over the entire resection surface were 0.75 and 2.15 mm for the endophytic and exophytic phantoms, respectively. Both tumors were resected with grossly negative margins. Point-based reregistration enabled instantaneous reregistration with minimal impact on RMS TRE compared with the initial registration (from 1.34 to 1.70 mm preresection and from 1.60 to 2.10 mm postresection). We present a novel and accurate registration and reregistration framework for use during IGS for PN with the da Vinci Xi surgical system. The technology is easily integrated into the surgical workflow and does not require additional hardware.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7987368PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/end.2020.0363DOI Listing

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