Pelphix: Surgical Phase Recognition from X-ray Images in Percutaneous Pelvic Fixation.

Journal: Medical image computing and computer-assisted intervention : MICCAI ... International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention
Published Date:

Abstract

Surgical phase recognition (SPR) is a crucial element in the digital transformation of the modern operating theater. While SPR based on video sources is well-established, incorporation of interventional X-ray sequences has not yet been explored. This paper presents Pelphix, a first approach to SPR for X-ray-guided percutaneous pelvic fracture fixation, which models the procedure at four levels of granularity - corridor, activity, view, and frame value - simulating the pelvic fracture fixation workflow as a Markov process to provide fully annotated training data. Using added supervision from detection of bony corridors, tools, and anatomy, we learn image representations that are fed into a transformer model to regress surgical phases at the four granularity levels. Our approach demonstrates the feasibility of X-ray-based SPR, achieving an average accuracy of 99.2% on simulated sequences and 71.7% in cadaver across all granularity levels, with up to 84% accuracy for the target corridor in real data. This work constitutes the first step toward SPR for the X-ray domain, establishing an approach to categorizing phases in X-ray-guided surgery, simulating realistic image sequences to enable machine learning model development, and demonstrating that this approach is feasible for the analysis of real procedures. As X-ray-based SPR continues to mature, it will benefit procedures in orthopedic surgery, angiography, and interventional radiology by equipping intelligent surgical systems with situational awareness in the operating room.

Authors

  • Benjamin D Killeen
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Han Zhang
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Jan Mangulabnan
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Mehran Armand
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Russell H Taylor
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Greg Osgood
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • Mathias Unberath
    Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

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