DocumentCode :
50492
Title :
Optimal Procedure Planning and Guidance System for Peripheral Bronchoscopy
Author :
Gibbs, Jason D. ; Graham, Michael W. ; Bascom, Rebecca ; Cornish, Duane C. ; Khare, Rahul ; Higgins, William
Author_Institution :
Broncus Med., Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA
Volume :
61
Issue :
3
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Mar-14
Firstpage :
638
Lastpage :
657
Abstract :
With the development of multidetector computed-tomography (MDCT) scanners and ultrathin bronchoscopes, the use of bronchoscopy for diagnosing peripheral lung-cancer nodules is becoming a viable option. The work flow for assessing lung cancer consists of two phases: 1) 3-D MDCT analysis and 2) live bronchoscopy. Unfortunately, the yield rates for peripheral bronchoscopy have been reported to be as low as 14%, and bronchoscopy performance varies considerably between physicians. Recently, proposed image-guided systems have shown promise for assisting with peripheral bronchoscopy. Yet, MDCT-based route planning to target sites has relied on tedious error-prone techniques. In addition, route planning tends not to incorporate known anatomical, device, and procedural constraints that impact a feasible route. Finally, existing systems do not effectively integrate MDCT-derived route information into the live guidance process. We propose a system that incorporates an automatic optimal route-planning method, which integrates known route constraints. Furthermore, our system offers a natural translation of the MDCT-based route plan into the live guidance strategy via MDCT/video data fusion. An image-based study demonstrates the route-planning method´s functionality. Next, we present a prospective lung-cancer patient study in which our system achieved a successful navigation rate of 91% to target sites. Furthermore, when compared to a competing commercial system, our system enabled bronchoscopy over two airways deeper into the airway-tree periphery with a sample time that was nearly 2 min shorter on average. Finally, our system´s ability to almost perfectly predict the depth of a bronchoscope´s navigable route in advance represents a substantial benefit of optimal route planning.
Keywords :
biomedical optical imaging; cancer; computerised tomography; image fusion; lung; medical image processing; surgery; video signal processing; 3D MDCT analysis; MDCT-video data fusion; guidance system; image-guided systems; live bronchoscopy; multidetector computed tomography scanners; optimal procedure planning system; peripheral bronchoscopy; peripheral lung cancer nodule diagnosis; route planning method; ultrathin bronchoscopes; Atmospheric modeling; Bronchoscopy; Navigation; Needles; Planning; Three-dimensional displays; Bronchoscopy; chest imaging; computed tomography; image-guided intervention systems; lung cancer; procedure planning; surgical guidance; virtual reality;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2013.2285627
Filename :
6632907
Link To Document :
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