Title :
A 3-D Ultrasound Robotic Prostate Brachytherapy System With Prostate Motion Tracking
Author :
Hungr, Nikolai ; Baumann, Michael ; Long, Jean-Alexandre ; Troccaz, Jocelyne
Author_Institution :
Tech. de l´´Ing. Medicale et de la Complexite, Inf., Math. et Applic. de Grenoble Lab., Grenoble, France
Abstract :
This paper describes a new 3-D ultrasound robotic prostate brachytherapy system. It uses a stationary 3-D ultrasound probe rigidly fixed to a robotic needle insertion mechanism. The novelty of the system is its ability to track prostate motion intraoperatively to allow the dose planning and needle trajectories or depths to be adapted to take into account these motions. Prostate tracking is done using a fast 3-D ultrasound registration algorithm previously validated for biopsy guidance. The 7-degree-of-freedom (7-DOF) robot and ultrasound probe are calibrated together with an accuracy of 0.9 mm, allowing the needles to be precisely inserted to the seed targets chosen in the reference ultrasound image. Experiments were conducted on mobile, deformable synthetic prostate phantoms using a prototype laboratory system. Results showed that, with prostate motions of up to 7 mm, the system was able to reach the chosen targets with less than 2-mm accuracy in the needle insertion direction. This measured accuracy included extrinsic measurement errors of up to 1.1 mm. A preliminary cadaver feasibility study was also described in preparation for more realistic experimentation of the system.
Keywords :
biomedical ultrasonics; image registration; medical robotics; object tracking; phantoms; 3D ultrasound robotic prostate brachytherapy system; 7-DOF robot; 7-degree-of-freedom robot; biopsy guidance; cadaver feasibility study; dose planning; extrinsic measurement errors; fast 3D ultrasound registration; mobile deformable synthetic prostate phantoms; needle insertion direction; needle trajectories; prostate motion intraoperatively; prostate motion tracking; prostate tracking; prototype laboratory system; robotic needle insertion mechanism; stationary 3D ultrasound probe; ultrasound image; Brachytherapy; Medical robotics; Needles; Probes; Prostate cancer; Tracking; Ultrasonic imaging; 3-D ultrasound guidance; Mechanism design; medical robots and systems; prostate motion tracking; prostate registration; robotic brachytherapy;
Journal_Title :
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TRO.2012.2203051