Abstract

PurposeCholecystectomy is one of the most common laparoscopic procedures. A critical phase of laparoscopic cholecystectomy consists in clipping the cystic duct and artery before cutting them. Surgeons can improve the clipping safety by ensuring full visibility of the clipper, while enclosing the artery or the duct with the clip applier jaws. This can prevent unintentional interaction with neighboring tissues or clip misplacement. In this article, we present a novel real-time feedback to ensure safe visibility of the instrument during this critical phase. This feedback incites surgeons to keep the tip of their clip applier visible while operating.MethodsWe present a new dataset of 300 laparoscopic cholecystectomy videos with frame-wise annotation of clipper tip visibility. We further present ClipAssistNet, a neural network-based image classifier which detects the clipper tip visibility in single frames. ClipAssistNet ensembles predictions from 5 neural networks trained on different subsets of the dataset.ResultsOur model learns to classify the clipper tip visibility by detecting its presence in the image. Measured on a separate test set, ClipAssistNet classifies the clipper tip visibility with an AUROC of 0.9107, and 66.15% specificity at 95% sensitivity. Additionally, it can perform real-time inference (16 FPS) on an embedded computing board; this enables its deployment in operating room settings.ConclusionThis work presents a new application of computer-assisted surgery for laparoscopic cholecystectomy, namely real-time feedback on adequate visibility of the clip applier. We believe this feedback can increase surgeons’ attentiveness when departing from safe visibility during the critical clipping of the cystic duct and artery.

Highlights

  • Laparoscopic surgeries are often preferred to open interventions

  • A critical phase of laparoscopic cholecystectomy consists in clipping the cystic duct and artery before cutting

  • Proper cutting of these structures requires dissection, as well as visual confirmation that the cystic duct/artery are completely captured within the clip applier jaws

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Summary

Introduction

Laparoscopic surgeries are often preferred to open interventions. They show a lower incidence of complications and quicker patient recuperation [39]. A critical phase of laparoscopic cholecystectomy consists in clipping the cystic duct and artery before cutting (see [32] for a brief description of laparoscopic cholecystectomy procedures). Proper cutting of these structures requires dissection, as well as visual confirmation that the cystic duct/artery are completely captured within the clip applier jaws Ensuring full visibility of the distal-most tips of the clip applier enables (i) controlling the International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery structure being clipped (to prevent hemorrhage or a bile leak due to misplaced clips [12,37,38]), or (ii) avoiding “pastpointing”: unintentional clipping of neighboring tissues (e.g., the common bile duct [26])

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