ROLGSYJun 12, 2023

Collaborative Robotic Biopsy with Trajectory Guidance and Needle Tip Force Feedback

arXiv:2306.07129v27 citationsh-index: 31
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of precise needle navigation for physicians in medical diagnostics, representing an incremental advance by integrating existing sensing and robotic methods.

The paper tackles the problem of improving needle placement in biopsies by combining robotic trajectory guidance with real-time haptic feedback of needle tip forces, achieving 91% detection of tissue interfaces in ex-vivo tests and accurate sampling of deep targets like the pancreas.

The diagnostic value of biopsies is highly dependent on the placement of needles. Robotic trajectory guidance has been shown to improve needle positioning, but feedback for real-time navigation is limited. Haptic display of needle tip forces can provide rich feedback for needle navigation by enabling localization of tissue structures along the insertion path. We present a collaborative robotic biopsy system that combines trajectory guidance with kinesthetic feedback to assist the physician in needle placement. The robot aligns the needle while the insertion is performed in collaboration with a medical expert who controls the needle position on site. We present a needle design that senses forces at the needle tip based on optical coherence tomography and machine learning for real-time data processing. Our robotic setup allows operators to sense deep tissue interfaces independent of frictional forces to improve needle placement relative to a desired target structure. We first evaluate needle tip force sensing in ex-vivo tissue in a phantom study. We characterize the tip forces during insertions with constant velocity and demonstrate the ability to detect tissue interfaces in a collaborative user study. Participants are able to detect 91% of ex-vivo tissue interfaces based on needle tip force feedback alone. Finally, we demonstrate that even smaller, deep target structures can be accurately sampled by performing post-mortem in situ biopsies of the pancreas.

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