Abstract

Metopic craniosynostosis is a condition caused by the premature fusion of the metopic cranial suture. If untreated, it can result into brain growth restriction, increased intra-cranial pressure, visual impairment, and cognitive delay. Fronto-orbital advancement is the widely accepted surgical approach to correct cranial shape abnormalities in patients with metopic craniosynostosis, but the outcome of the surgery remains very dependent on the expertise of the surgeon because of the lack of objective and personalized cranial shape metrics to target during the intervention. We propose in this paper a locally affine diffeomorphic surface registration framework to create an optimal interventional plan personalized to each patient. Our method calculates the optimal surgical plan by minimizing cranial shape abnormalities, which are quantified using objective metrics based on a normative model of cranial shapes built from 198 healthy cases. It is guided by clinical osteotomy templates for fronto-orbital advancement, and it automatically calculates how much and in which direction each bone piece needs to be translated, rotated, and/or bent. Our locally affine framework models separately the transformation of each bone piece while ensuring the consistency of the global transformation. We used our method to calculate the optimal surgical plan for 23 patients, obtaining a significant reduction of malformations (p < 0.001) between 40.38% and 50.85% in the simulated outcome of the surgery using different osteotomy templates. In addition, malformation values were within healthy ranges (p > 0.01).

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