CVIVMar 22, 2019

Pose Estimation of Periacetabular Osteotomy Fragments with Intraoperative X-Ray Navigation

arXiv:1903.09339v236 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the challenge for surgeons in accurately interpreting fragment pose during pelvic osteotomies, which is typically limited to single-axis rotation, by providing a comprehensive intraoperative estimate compatible with minimally invasive procedures.

The researchers tackled the problem of accurately estimating the position and orientation of bone fragments during periacetabular osteotomy surgery by developing an X-ray navigation system without external fiducials, achieving average pose errors of 2.2°/2.2 mm in cadaver experiments when using the actual fragment shape.

Objective: State of the art navigation systems for pelvic osteotomies use optical systems with external fiducials. We propose the use of X-Ray navigation for pose estimation of periacetabular fragments without fiducials. Methods: A 2D/3D registration pipeline was developed to recover fragment pose. This pipeline was tested through an extensive simulation study and 6 cadaveric surgeries. Using osteotomy boundaries in the fluoroscopic images, the preoperative plan is refined to more accurately match the intraoperative shape. Results: In simulation, average fragment pose errors were 1.3°/1.7 mm when the planned fragment matched the intraoperative fragment, 2.2°/2.1 mm when the plan was not updated to match the true shape, and 1.9°/2.0 mm when the fragment shape was intraoperatively estimated. In cadaver experiments, the average pose errors were 2.2°/2.2 mm, 3.8°/2.5 mm, and 3.5°/2.2 mm when registering with the actual fragment shape, a preoperative plan, and an intraoperatively refined plan, respectively. Average errors of the lateral center edge angle were less than 2° for all fragment shapes in simulation and cadaver experiments. Conclusion: The proposed pipeline is capable of accurately reporting femoral head coverage within a range clinically identified for long-term joint survivability. Significance: Human interpretation of fragment pose is challenging and usually restricted to rotation about a single anatomical axis. The proposed pipeline provides an intraoperative estimate of rigid pose with respect to all anatomical axes, is compatible with minimally invasive incisions, and has no dependence on external fiducials.

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