The present invention relates generally to biopsy. More particularly the present invention relates to a device and methods for transrectal, ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy.
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common non-cutaneous malignancy and the second leading cause of cancer related death among US men. Nearly 1 of every 6 men will be diagnosed with the disease at some time in their lives. The best current estimate of PCa aggressiveness is the Gleason score obtained from core needle biopsy. The most common biopsy method is freehand transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) guided. Since ultrasound only rarely identifies PCa visually, systematic biopsy (SB) intends to sample the prostate evenly. But freehand biopsy is highly inconsistent, subjective, and results in uneven sampling, leaving large regions of the prostate unsampled, which can lead to under-sampling of clinically significant PCa, and implicitly under-staging of PCa diagnosis. In response, the current trend is directed towards a targeted biopsy (TB) approach guided by multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging (mpMRI). TB has advantages over SB because it allows the biopsy needle to be guided to sampling areas based on imaging that shows cancer suspicious regions (CSR). TB methods include direct in-bore MRI targeting and methods that register (fuse) pre-acquired MRI to interventional ultrasound: cognitive fusion and device/software aided fusion. Current fusion biopsy devices include: Artemis (Eigen), PercuNav (Philips), UroNav (Invivo), UroStation (Koelis), and BK Ultrasound systems.
With the fusion, few cores directed towards the CSRs are taken in addition to the 12-cores of SB. TB cores yield a higher cancer detection rate of clinically significant PCa than SB cores. But TB cores miss a large number of clinically significant PCa detected by SB, because mpMRI itself has 5%-15% false-negative clinically significant cancer detection rate. A recent multicenter randomized trial allowed men with normal mpMRI (PI-RADS≤2) to avoid biopsy and reported that TB alone may be preferable to the routine freehand SB. But the study does not tell how many men in whom biopsy was not performed might harbor clinically significant PCa. TB alone is risky and SB plays an important role in prostate diagnosis: 1) Fusion can only be offered to patients with mpMRI findings, yet 21% of biopsy patients have none (range 15%-30%, 3544 patients). SB on patients with no mpMRI findings found 42% of men to harbor PCa, of which ⅓ were clinically significant PCa; 2) On equivocal mpMRI lesions (PI-RADS=3), TB alone misses 56% of Gleason 7-10 cancers; 3) The MRI for TB adds $700-$1,500/case, and reliable mpMRI interpretation is limited. The large majority of over 1 million prostate biopsies performed annually in the US are SB. Therefore, SB plays an important role independently and together with TB.
Commonly, SB and TB are freehand procedures performed under transrectal ultrasound guidance with the TRUS probe manually operated by a urologist and a needle passed alongside the probe. To acquire ultrasound images, the TRUS probe must maintain contact with the rectal wall for the sonic waves to propagate, in turn pushing against the prostate. The TRUS probe is known to deform the gland, and the amount of pressure is typically variable throughout the procedure. Images at different regions of the prostate use different compression. If the deformed 2D images are rendered in 3D, the actual shape and volume of the gland are skewed. Further, if a biopsy plan (SB or TB) is made on the skewed images, the plan is geometrically inaccurate. Moreover, when the needle is inserted for biopsy, the probe deforms the prostate differently contributing to additional targeting errors. The errors can be significant, for example 2.35 to 10.1 mm (mean of 6.11 mm). Ideally, targeting errors for PCa biopsy should be <5 mm (clinically significant PCa lesion ≥5 cm3 in volume).
Biopsy planning and needle targeting errors are problematic for both SB and TB. At fusion TB, pre-acquired mpMRI is registered to the interventional TRUS images. The registration is typically performed by aligning the shapes of the gland in ultrasound and MRI. This alignment is challenging due to shape differences caused by the dissimilar timing, patient positioning, imaging modalities, etc. Prostate deformations by the TRUS probe further magnify the registration problem. Several elastic registration algorithms have been developed to reduce errors, and improved the initial registration. However, handling prostate deformations at the time of each needle insertion for biopsy remains problematic.
Reducing prostate deformations at biopsy has been achieved on the transperineal needle path, for example with the TargetScan device and Mona Lisa robot. However, no current transrectal biopsy device can reliably minimize prostate deformations. Most devices freehand the probe and inherently deform the prostate unevenly. The only device that offers probe handling assistance is the Artemis device, which uses a mechanical encoded TRUS support arm. This arm helps to reduce deformations, but its manual operation leads to variability among urologists.
It would therefore be advantageous to provide a device and method that allows for hands-free TRUS guided prostate biopsy that reduces prostate deformation and is consistent between urologists.
According to a first aspect of the present invention a system for prostate biopsy includes a robot-operated, hands-free TRUS-ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The system includes a biopsy needle. The system also includes a robot controller. The robot controller is configured to communicate with and control the manipulation arm and TRUS-ultrasound probe in a manner that minimizes prostate deflection. The system also includes an ultrasound module for viewing images from the TRUS-ultrasound probe.
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention, the system further includes the robot controller being programmed with a prostate coordinate system. The robot controller is programmed with a systematic biopsy plan. The robot controller allows for computer control of the TRUS-ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The robot controller allows for physician control of the TRUS-ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The manipulation arm moves the probe with 4-degrees-of-freedom.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, the prostate control system includes a program for determining the prostate coordinate system based on anatomical landmarks of the prostate. The anatomical landmarks are the apex (A) and base (B) of the prostate. The program for determining the prostate coordinate system further includes using A and B to determine a prostate coordinate system (PCS) for the prostate. The program also includes determining the direction of the PCS based on the Left-Posterior-Superior (LPS) system, wherein an S axis is aligned along the AB direction and P is aligned with a saggital plane. The system includes calculating an optimal approach and order for a set of biopsy points determined from the PCS.
In accordance with still another aspect of the present invention, the robot controller is programmed with a systematic or targeted biopsy plan. The robot controller allows for computer control of the ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The robot controller allows for physician control of the ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The manipulation arm moves the probe with 4-degrees-of-freedom.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present invention, the system includes a microphone, wherein the microphone triggers automatic acquisition of ultrasound images based on firing noise or a signal from the biopsy needle. The ultrasound probe is configured to apply minimal pressure over a prostate gland to avoid prostate deformations and skewed imaging. The prostate can be approached with minimal pressure and deformations also for biopsy. The system includes automatically acquiring images from medical imaging equipment based on firing noise of a biopsy needle, or signal from another medical instrument. The images are acquired for a purpose of documenting a clinical measure.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a method for biopsy of a prostate includes determining a midpoint between an apex (A) and base (B) of the prostate. The method also includes using A and B to determine a prostate coordinate system (PCS) for the prostate and determining the direction of the PCS based on the Left-Posterior-Superior (LPS) system, wherein an S axis is aligned along the AB direction and P is aligned with a saggital plane. The method includes calculating an optimal approach and order for a set of biopsy points determined from the PCS.
In accordance with even another aspect of the present invention, the method includes imaging the prostate with an ultrasound probe with minimal pressure over a prostate gland to avoid prostate deformations and skewed imaging. The prostate can be approached with minimal pressure and deformations also for biopsy. The method includes automatically acquiring images from medical imaging equipment based on firing noise of a biopsy needle, or signal from another medical instrument. The method includes acquiring the images for a purpose of documenting a clinical measure. The method also includes triggering automatic acquisition of ultrasound images based on firing noise or a signal from the biopsy needle acquired by a microphone. Additionally, the method includes computer control of the ultrasound probe and manipulation arm. The computer control allows for physician control of the ultrasound probe and manipulation arm.
The accompanying drawings provide visual representations which will be used to more fully describe the representative embodiments disclosed herein and can be used by those skilled in the art to better understand them and their inherent advantages. In these drawings, like reference numerals identify corresponding elements and:
The presently disclosed subject matter now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying Drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the inventions are shown. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. The presently disclosed subject matter may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Indeed, many modifications and other embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which the presently disclosed subject matter pertains having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated Drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the presently disclosed subject matter is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
A robot-assisted approach for transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) guided prostate biopsy includes a hands-free probe manipulator that moves the probe with the same 4 degrees-of-freedom (DoF) that are used manually. Transrectal prostate biopsy is taken one step further, with an actuated TRUS manipulation arm. The robot of the present invention enables the performance of hands-free, skill-independent prostate biopsy. Methods to minimize the deformation of the prostate caused by the probe at 3D imaging and needle targeting are included to reduce biopsy targeting errors. The present invention also includes a prostate coordinate system (PCS). The PCS helps defining a systematic biopsy plan without the need for prostate segmentation. A novel method to define an SB plan is included for 3D imaging, biopsy planning, robot control, and navigation.
Comprehensive tests were performed, including 2 bench tests, 1 imaging test, 2 in vitro targeting tests, and an IRB-approved clinical trial on 5 patients. Preclinical tests showed that image-based needle targeting can be accomplished with accuracy on the order of 1 mm. Prostate biopsy can be accomplished with minimal TRUS pressure on the gland and submillimetric prostate deformations. All 5 clinical cases were successful with an average procedure time of 13 min and millimeter targeting accuracy. Hands-free TRUS operation, transrectal TRUS guided prostate biopsy with minimal prostate deformations, and the PCS based biopsy plan are novel methods. Robot-assisted prostate biopsy is safe and feasible. Accurate needle targeting has the potential to increase the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer.
A robot according to the present invention is a TRUS probe manipulator that moves the probe with the same 4 degrees-of-freedom (DoF) that are used manually in transrectal procedures, closely replicating its movement by hand, but eliminating prostate deformation and variation between urologists.
For biopsy, the robot includes a backlash-free cable transmission for the ξ3 rotary axis and (previous used gears), and larger translational range along the ξ3 axis. The hardware limits of the joints in a preferred embodiment are: θ1 about ξ1(±86°), θ2 about ξ2 (−17° to 46°), θ3 about δ3(±98°, τ along ξ3(±49 mm).
The robot is supported by a passive arm which mounts on the side of the procedure table. With special adapters, the robot can support various probes. A 2D end-fire ultrasound probe (EUP-V53W, Hitachi Medical Corporation, Japan) was mounted in the robot and connected to a Hitachi HI VISION Preirus machine. As shown in
A system diagram is shown in
An exemplary robot controller is built with a PC with Intel® Core™ i7 3.07-GHz CPU, 8 GB RAM, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 GPU, Matrox Orion HD video capture board, MC8000 (PMDi, Victoria, BC, Canada) motion control board, 12V/4.25Ah UPS, and 24V power supplies. Custom software was developed in Visual C++ (Microsoft, Seattle, Wash.) using commercial libraries comprising MFC, MCI, and MIL, and open-source libraries comprising Eigen, OpenCV, OpenMP, GDCM, VTK, and ITK.
3D ultrasound is acquired from a 2D probe with a robotic scan. A one-time calibration process is required, to determine the transformation and scaling TUR (4×4 matrix) from the robot coordinate system ΣR to the image frame ΣU, as illustrated in
3D ultrasound is acquired with a robotic rotary scan about ξ3 axis. During the scan, images are acquired from the ultrasound machine over the video capture board. At the time of each image acquisition, the computer also records the current robot joint coordinates and calculates the position of the respective image frame in robot coordinates (ΣR) through the calibration and forward kinematics. Overall, the raw data is a series of image-position pairs. A 3D volume image is then constructed from the raw data using a variation of Trobaugh's method. Rather than filling voxels with the mean of two pixels that are closest to the voxel regardless of distance (needed to fill all voxels in the case of a manual scan), only the pixels that are within a given distance (enabled by the uniform robotic scan) were used. The distance was set to half of the acoustic beam width (D), which is determined at calibration. The speed of the rotary scan, Vscan, is calculated to fill the voxels that are farthest from ξ3, at radius R, as:
where ƒ [fps] is the ultrasound frame rate (read on the machine display). Due to the rotary scan, pixels that are closer to the axis are denser, so the number of pixels that were averaged in each voxel was limited (i.e. 5). Practically, the speed of the scan is limited by the frame rate of the ultrasound machine (i.e. 15 fps).
Experimentally, the ultrasound array was not perfectly aligned with the shaft of the ultrasound probe and respectively with ξ3. The rotary scan left blank voxels near the axis. To fill these, a small ξ2 (3°) motion normal to the image plane was performed before the pure rotary scan.
At the time of the scan, the end-fire probe is initially set to be near the central sagittal image of the gland and the current joint values of θ1 and θ2 are saved as a scan position (θ1s and θ2s). The probe is then retracted (translation τ along ξ3, typically under joystick control) until the quality of the image starts to deteriorate by losing contact, and is then slightly advanced to recover image quality. This insertion level sets the minimal pressure needed for imaging. The rotary scan is performed without changing the insertion depth. As such, the probe pressure over the gland is maintained to the minimum level throughout the scan since the axis of rotation coincides with the axis of the semi-spherical probe end and gel lubrication is used to reduce friction. The method enables 3D imaging with quasi-uniform, minimal prostate deformations. The method of the present invention below will show that the minimal deformation can also be preserved at biopsy.
For the accuracy of needle targeting according to and based on the acquired 3D image, it is essential that the gland maintains the same shape at biopsy. Therefore, the same level of prostate compression should be used as much as possible. The following 3 steps are used:
1) Optimizing the Probe Approach to Each Biopsy Site
The probe insertion level used at scanning is preserved (r is locked). Still, infinitely many solutions for the joint angles θ1, θ2, and θ3 exist to approach the same target point. This is fortunate, because it leaves room to optimize the approach angles in order to minimize prostate deformations. As shown above, the rotation about the probe axis (ξ3) preserves prostate deformations due to the semi-spherical probe point. As such, needle targeting should be performed as much as possible with ξ3, and motions in the RCM axes ξ1 and ξ2, which are lateral to the probe, should be reduced. If a biopsy target point is selected in the 3D ultrasound image, the robot should automatically orient the probe so that the needle-guide points towards the target. The volume image is in robot coordinates, therefore, the target point is already in robot coordinates. Robot's inverse kinematics is required to determine the corresponding joint coordinates. Here, the specific inverse kinematics are shown that includes the needle and solves the joint angles θ1, θ2 for a given target point {right arrow over (p)}∈3, insertion level τ, and joint angle θ3.
As shown in
The axes of the robot are:
ξ1=(sinϕ,0,−cosϕ)T
ξ2=(0,1,0)T (1)
ξ3=(0,0,1)T
where ϕ=60° is a constant offset angle. The needle insertion depth L required to place the needle point at the target {right arrow over (p)} is:
L=L
e
+L
p+τ (2)
where Le is a constant distance between the entry point of the needle guide and the RCM point in the direction of the axis ξ3, and Lp is a distance between the RCM point and the target point {right arrow over (p)} in the direction of the axis ξ3 such that:
L
p=√{square root over ({right arrow over (p)}T{right arrow over (p)}−{right arrow over (o)}T{right arrow over (o)})} (3)
When the robot is in zero position as shown in
{right arrow over (q)}
1=(ox,oy,−Lp)T (4)
and when rotated by θ3 is:
{right arrow over (q)}
2
=e
{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
{right arrow over (q)}
1 (5)
where {circumflex over (ξ)}3 is the cross-product matrix of ξ3.
Then, θ1 and θ2 satisfy:
e
{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
e
{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
{right arrow over (q)}
2
={right arrow over (p)} (6)
where {circumflex over (ξ)}1 and {circumflex over (ξ)}2 are the cross-product matrices of ξ1 and ξ2, respectively. If {right arrow over (q)}3 is a point such that:
{right arrow over (q)}
3
=e
{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
{right arrow over (q)}
2
=e
−{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
{right arrow over (p)} (7)
then:
{right arrow over (q)}
3=αξ1+βξ2+γ(ξ1×ξ2) (8)
where:
Finally, θ1 and θ2 can be found by solving:
e
{circumflex over (ξ)}
θ
{right arrow over (q)}
2
={right arrow over (q)}
3 and e−ξ
as:
θ2=a tan2(ξ2T({right arrow over (q)}′2×{right arrow over (q)}′3),q′2T{right arrow over (q)}′3) (10)
{right arrow over (q)}′
2
={right arrow over (q)}
2−ξ2ξ2T{right arrow over (q)}2
{right arrow over (q)}′
3
={right arrow over (q)}
3−ξ2ξ2T{right arrow over (q)}3
θ1=−a tan2(ξ1T({right arrow over (p)}′×{right arrow over (q)}″3),{right arrow over (p)}′T{right arrow over (q)}″3) (11)
{right arrow over (p)}′={right arrow over (p)}−ξ
1ξ1T{right arrow over (p)}
{right arrow over (q)}″
3
={right arrow over (q)}
3−ξ1ξ1T{right arrow over (q)}3
From the hardware joint limits of the robot, the range of θ2 is −17.0°≤θ2≤46.0°. Therefore, θ1 and θ2 are unique since {circumflex over (q)}3 is unique (γ<0).
For a given target {right arrow over (p)} and θ3, a unique solution (θ1, θ2)T that aligns the needle on target is calculated by solving the inverse kinematics () problem as shown above:
(θ1,θ2)T=({right arrow over (p)},θ3) (12)
For example, the dark grey curve in
The optimal θ1 and θ2 angles are:
(θ1opt,θ2opt)T=({right arrow over (p)},θ3opt) (14)
A gradient descent algorithm was used to determine the minimum solution. Given the shapes of the curves, the global minimum was found by starting the minimization from each limit and the center of the θ3 range and retaining the lowest solution.
2) Optimizing the Order of the Biopsy Cores
Once the optimal approach angles are calculated for a set of n biopsy points, the order of the biopsies can also be optimized to minimize the travel of the probe, a problem known as the travelling salesman problem (TSP). The TSP is to find the shortest route that starts from the initial scan position, visits each biopsy point once, and returns to the initial scan position {right arrow over (s)}0=(θ1s, θ2s, 0)T. The optimal approach of biopsy point i=1, . . . , n is {right arrow over (s)}i=(θ1i, θ2i, θ3i)T. The squared distance between a pair of points is:
d({right arrow over (s)}i,{right arrow over (s)}j)=({right arrow over (s)}i−{right arrow over (s)}j)T({right arrow over (s)}i−{right arrow over (s)}j) for i≠j (15)
The goal is to find an ordering π that minimizes the total distance:
The solution of the TSP is found using a 2-step algorithm.
3) Prostate Coordinate System (PCS) and Extended Sextant Biopsy Plan
The algorithms above calculate the optimal approach and order for a set of biopsy points. Systematic or targeted biopsy points can be used, depending on the procedure and decision of the urologist. For systematic biopsy, the present invention also includes software tools to help the urologist formulate the plan, graphically, based on the acquired 3D ultrasound. The most common systematic biopsy plan is the extended sextant plan of 12-cores. The plan uses a Prostate Coordinate System (PCS) that is derived based on anatomic landmarks of the prostate. The origin of the PCS is defined at the midpoint between the apex (A) and base (B) of the prostate. The direction of the PCS follows the anatomic Left-Posterior-Superior (LPS) system (same as in the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard). The S axis is aligned along the AB direction, and P is aligned within the sagittal plane.
The PCS facilitates the definition of the biopsy plan. A SB template is centered over the PCS and scaled with the AB distance. As such, defining the PCS allows to define the plan without the need for prostate segmentation. For the extended sextant plan, the 12 cores are initially placed by the software on the central coronal (SL plane) image of the gland and scaled according to the AB distance. The software then allows the physician to adjust the location of the cores as needed, as illustrated in
The robot control component of the software is used to monitor and control the robot, as illustrated in
In an exemplary implementation of the present invention, which is not meant to be considered limiting, the TRUS probe is cleaned and disinfected as usual, mounted in the robot, and covered with a condom as usual. The patient is positioned in the left lateral decubitus position and periprostatic local anesthesia are performed as usual. With the support arm unlocked, the TRUS probe mounted in the robot is placed transrectally and adjusted to show a central sagittal view of the prostate. The support arm is locked for the duration of the procedure. The minimal level of probe insertion is adjusted under joystick control as described, herein. A 3D rotary scan is then performed under software control, as shown herein. The PCS and biopsy plan are made by the urologist. The software then optimizes the approach to each core and core order. Sequentially, the robot moves automatically to each core position. The urologist inserts the needle through the needle-guide up to the depth overlaid onto the real time ultrasound, as illustrated in
Comprehensive experiments were carried out to validate the system. These experiments are included by way of example and are not meant to be considered limiting. The validation experiments include two bench tests, an imaging test, two targeting tests, and five clinical trials on patients. Needle targeting accuracy and precision results were calculated as the average and standard deviation of the needle targeting errors, respectively.
In a Robot Joint Accuracy Test, an optical tracker (Polaris, NDI, Canada) was used to measure the 3D position of a reflective marker attached to the probe (˜250 mm from RCM point) as shown in
One at a time, each joint of the robot was moved with an increment of 5° for θ1, θ2, θ3, and 5 mm for τ over the entire ranges of motion. 500 position measurements of the marker were acquired and averaged at each static position.
For each axis, the measured increments between consecutive points were compared to the commanded increments. For the rotary axes, a plane was fitted to the respective point set using a least square technique. The point set was then projected onto the plane and a circle was fitted using a least square technique. Rotary axes increments were measured as the angles between the radials to each position, in plane. For the translational axis, a principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to the point set and the first principal axis was estimated. Translational axis increments were measured as the distances between consecutive points projected onto the first principal axis.
In a Robot Set Point Test, the experimental setup was similar to the previous tests, but the optical marker was fitted on a rod passed through the needle guide to simulate the needle point (˜142 mm from the RCM point, 55 mm from the probe tip). The axes were moved incrementally as follows: move θ1 from −45° to 45° with 5° increment (19 positions); For each move θ2 from −15° to 40° with 5° increment (12 positions); For each, move θ3 from −90° to 90° with 30° increment (7 positions). The translation was fixed at τ=0 because its moving direction is parallel to the needle insertion axis. Each of the k=19×12×7=1596 marker locations was measured with the tracker and formed the dataset {right arrow over (g)}∈3. Each commanded joint position was passed through the forward kinematics of the robot to calculate the robot-space commanded dataset {right arrow over (h)}∈3. The homogeneous transformation matrix F∈4×4 between the tracker and robot coordinates was estimated with a rigid point cloud registration technique. The virtual needle point positioning error ev was evaluated as the average positioning error:
In a Grid Targeting Test, the grid described above was also targeted with the needle point to observe by inspection how close the needle point can target the crossings, as illustrated in
In a Prostate Mockup Targeting Test, a prostate mockup (M053, CIRS Inc., Norfolk, Va.) was used, as illustrated in
Needle insertion errors en were measured as distances between the imaged needle axis and the target point, as illustrated in
Finally, the 3D displacement and deformation of the prostate were measured between the pre- and post-biopsy ultrasound volumes. The displacement Dp was the distance between the centroids of the two surfaces. Then, the pre-biopsy surface was translated to align the centers, and the deformations were calculated as a mean Dƒ and maximum value Dƒmax of the distances between the corresponding closest points of the surfaces, as illustrated in
A final experiment was performed to visually observe the motion of the TRUS probe about the prostate and how the probe deforms the prostate. The prostate mockup was made of a soft-boiled chicken egg, peeled shell, and placed on 4 vertical poles support. The support was made to gently hold the egg so that the egg could be easily unbalanced and pushed off, to see if biopsy can be performed on the egg without dropping it. A limitation of this experiment is that the egg mockup is unrealistic in many respects. This is a way to visualize the motion of the probe about the prostate, motion that is calculated by algorithms, and is difficult to observe with closed, more realistic mockups.
In an exemplary clinical trial, that is not meant to be considered limiting, the safety and feasibility of robotic prostate biopsy was assessed. The study was carried out on five men with an elevated PSA level (≥4 ng/ml) and/or abnormal DRE. For all the cases, extended sextant systematic prostate biopsies were performed based on the protocol described herein.
The joint accuracies and precision of the robot are shown in TABLE I.
The accuracies and precisions of the 25 grid points with 5 different depth settings are presented in TABLE II.
For the grid depth of 20 mm, the number of experiments with targeting errors ≤0.5, ≤1.0, and >1.0 mm were 18, 6, and 1 respectively. For the grid depth of 40 mm, the corresponding number were 21, 3, and 1, respectively. For the grid depth of 60 mm, the corresponding numbers were 20, 5, and 0. The two cases when the errors were >1.0 mm appeared to be ≤1.5 mm. One of these cases is shown in
The biopsy on the egg experiment performed the 3D scan and positioned the probe for biopsy without pushing the egg off the support.
The robot allowed 3D imaging of the prostate, 3D size measurements, and volume estimation. The results are presented in TABLE IV.
The robot also enabled hands-free TRUS operation for prostate biopsy and all 5 procedures were successful from the first attempt. The biopsy procedures took 13 min on average. Slight patient motion at the time of biopsy firing was occasionally observed. No remnant prostate shift was observed. There were no adverse effects due to the robotic system. Three of the five patients had malignant tumor with biopsy Gleason Scores of 3+3, 3+4, and 3+3. Numerical results are presented in Table V.
Image registration is a commonly required step of clinical procedures that are guided by medical images. This step must normally be performed during the procedure and adds to the overall time. With the TRUS robot, and also with fusion biopsy devices, intra-procedural registration is not required. Instead, a calibration is performed only once for a given probe. The probe adapter was designed to mount it repeatedly at the same position when removed for cleaning and reinstalled, to preserve the calibration.
Bench positioning tests show that the robot itself can point a needle with submillimeter accuracy and precision. The geometric accuracy and precision of 3D imaging were submillimetric. Combined, image-guided targeting errors in a water tank (no deformations) were submillimetric in 97.3% of the tests and <1.5 mm overall. Experiments on prostate mockups showed that changes in the position and deformation of the prostate at the time of the initial scan and biopsy were submillimetric. Overall, needle targeting accuracy in a deformable model was 1.43 mm. The biopsy on the egg experiment showed that the robot can operate the TRUS probe gently, with minimal pressure.
Preserving small prostate deformations at the time of the 3D scan and biopsy was achieved by using primarily rotary motion about the axis of the probe and minimizing lateral motion. A similar approach may be intuitively made with the Artemis (Eigen) system, which uses a passive support of the arm of the TRUS probe. Here, the optimal approach angles are derived mathematically.
In the experiments optimal solutions were uncommon, unintuitive, and not ergonomic to freehand.
A coordinate system associated with the prostate (PCS), and a method to formulate a SB plan based on the PCS are also included in the present invention. Several prostate biopsy systems use intraoperative methods to locate a system that is similar to the PCS, by manually positioning the probe centrally to the prostate. In the approach of the present invention, the PCS is derived in the 3D image, possibly making it more reliable. The two methods were not compared in the present report.
At biopsy, images of the inserted needle are commonly acquired after firing the needle. At hands-free biopsy or with other biopsy devices, the acquisition is triggered by the urologist, from a button or pedal. Herein, a simple innovation is presented that triggers the acquisition automatically, by using a small microphone circuit located next to the needle that listens for the firing noise that biopsy needles commonly make, and triggers the acquisition immediately after the biopsy noise. Capturing the image at the exact moment increases precision and reliability. The automation simplifies the task for the urologist, avoids forgetting to capture the image, and makes the process slightly faster.
The results of the clinical trial show that robot-assisted prostate biopsy was safe and feasible. Needle targeting accuracy was on the order of 1 mm. Additional possible errors such as errors caused by patient motion should be further evaluated and minimized. No significant patient movement was observed during the limited initial trial, and no loss of ultrasound coupling was experienced. The development of a leg support to help the patient maintain the position and additional algorithms to correct for motion are in progress.
The TRUS robot and the Artemis device are the only systems that manipulate the probe about a RCM fulcrum point. With the other systems that freehand the probe, the fulcrum is floating. Thus far, there has not been patient discomfort related to fixing the fulcrum. Performing biopsy with minimal probe pressure and motion could ease the discomfort and help the patient to hold still.
Clinically, the robot of the present invention is for transrectal biopsy and the other approach is transperineal. Traditionally, transperineal biopsy was uncommon because requires higher anesthesia and an operating room setting, but offered the advantage of lower infection rates. New transperineal approaches for SB and cognitive TB are emerging with less anesthesia and at the clinic. Yet, the mainstream prostate biopsy is transrectal. Several methods reported herein, such as the PCS and TRUS imaging with reduced prostate deformations could apply as well to transperineal biopsy. The robot of the present invention can guide a biopsy needle on target regardless of human skills. The approach enables prostate biopsy with minimal pressure over the prostate and small prostate deformations, which can help to improve the accuracy of needle targeting according to the biopsy plan.
It should be noted that the software associated with the present invention is programmed onto a non-transitory computer readable medium that can be read and executed by any of the computing devices mentioned in this application. The non-transitory computer readable medium can take any suitable form known to one of skill in the art. The non-transitory computer readable medium is understood to be any article of manufacture readable by a computer. Such non-transitory computer readable media includes, but is not limited to, magnetic media, such as floppy disk, flexible disk, hard disk, reel-to-reel tape, cartridge tape, cassette tapes or cards, optical media such as CD-ROM, DVD, Blu-ray, writable compact discs, magneto-optical media in disc, tape, or card form, and paper media such as punch cards or paper tape. Alternately, the program for executing the method and algorithms of the present invention can reside on a remote server or other networked device. Any databases associated with the present invention can be housed on a central computing device, server(s), in cloud storage, or any other suitable means known to or conceivable by one of skill in the art. All of the information associated with the application is transmitted either wired or wirelessly over a network, via the internet, cellular telephone network, RFID, or any other suitable data transmission means known to or conceivable by one of skill in the art.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/774,559 filed on Dec. 3, 2018, which is incorporated by reference, herein, in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2019/064208 | 12/3/2019 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62774559 | Dec 2018 | US |