MED-PHLGOct 5, 2020

Improving Reconstructive Surgery Design using Gaussian Process Surrogates to Capture Material Behavior Uncertainty

arXiv:2010.02800v117 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of surgical planning under material uncertainty for reconstructive surgeons, offering a computationally efficient tool to potentially reduce scarring and complications, though it is incremental in applying existing surrogate modeling techniques to a specific medical domain.

The paper tackled the problem of predicting stress in reconstructive surgery to reduce complications by using Gaussian process surrogates to model skin flap behavior, showing that fiber direction has the most significant impact on strain variations and proposing optimal orientations for three clinical objectives.

Excessive loads near wounds produce pathological scarring and other complications. Presently, stress cannot easily be measured by surgeons in the operating room. Instead, surgeons rely on intuition and experience. Predictive computational tools are ideal candidates for surgery planning. Finite element (FE) simulations have shown promise in predicting stress fields on large skin patches and complex cases, helping to identify potential regions of complication. Unfortunately, these simulations are computationally expensive and deterministic. However, running a few, well-selected FE simulations allows us to create Gaussian process (GP) surrogate models of local cutaneous flaps that are computationally efficient and able to predict stress and strain for arbitrary material parameters. Here, we create GP surrogates for the advancement, rotation, and transposition flaps. We then use the predictive capability of these surrogates to perform a global sensitivity analysis, ultimately showing that fiber direction has the most significant impact on strain field variations. We then perform an optimization to determine the optimal fiber direction for each flap for three different objectives driven by clinical guidelines. While material properties are not controlled by the surgeon and are actually a source of uncertainty, the surgeon can in fact control the orientation of the flap. Therefore, fiber direction is the only material parameter that can be optimized clinically. The optimization task relies on the efficiency of the GP surrogates to calculate the expected cost of different strategies when the uncertainty of other material parameters is included. We propose optimal flap orientations for the three cost functions and that can help in reducing stress resulting from the surgery and ultimately reduce complications associated with excessive mechanical loading near wounds.

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