Supporting diagnostics and therapy planning for percutaneous ablation of liver and abdominal tumors and pre-clinical evaluation

•Percutaneous ablation methods are used to treat primary and metastatic liver tumors.•A multi-stage approach has been developed to support percutaneous tumours ablation by developed image navigation system.•The presented approach was evaluated using diagnostic abdominal computed tomography images an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computerized medical imaging and graphics 2019-12, Vol.78, p.101664-101664, Article 101664
Hauptverfasser: Spinczyk, Dominik, Badura, Aleksandra, Sperka, Piotr, Stronczek, Marcin, Pyciński, Bartłomiej, Juszczyk, Jan, Czajkowska, Joanna, Biesok, Marta, Rudzki, Marcin, Więcławek, Wojciech, Zarychta, Piotr, Badura, Paweł, Woloshuk, Andre, Żyłkowski, Jarosław, Rosiak, Grzegorz, Konecki, Dariusz, Milczarek, Krzysztof, Rowiński, Olgierd, Piętka, Ewa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Percutaneous ablation methods are used to treat primary and metastatic liver tumors.•A multi-stage approach has been developed to support percutaneous tumours ablation by developed image navigation system.•The presented approach was evaluated using diagnostic abdominal computed tomography images and calibration phantom.•The obtained results indicate the possibility of using the developed method of navigation in clinical practice. Percutaneous ablation methods are used to treat primary and metastatic liver tumors. Image guided navigation support minimally invasive interventions of rigid anatomical structures. When working with the displacement and deformation of soft tissues during surgery, as in the abdomen, imaging navigation systems are in the preliminary implementation stage. In this study a multi-stage approach has been developed to support percutaneous liver tumors ablation. It includes CT image acquisition protocol with the amplitude of respiratory motion that yields images subjected to a semi-automatic method able to deliver personalized abdominal model. Then, US probe and ablation needle calibration, as well as patient position adjustment method during the procedure for the preoperative anatomy model, have been combined. Finally, an advanced module for fusion of the preoperative CT with intraoperative US images was designed. These modules have been tested on a phantom and in the clinical environment. The final average Spatial calibration error was 1,7 mm, the average error of matching the position of the markers was about 2 mm during the entire breathing cycle, and average markers fusion error 495 mm. The obtained results indicate the possibility of using the developed method of navigation in clinical practice.
ISSN:0895-6111
1879-0771
DOI:10.1016/j.compmedimag.2019.101664