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Preclinical evaluation of an MRI-compatible pneumatic robot for angulated needle placement in transperineal prostate interventions
Authors:Junichi Tokuda  Sang-Eun Song  Gregory S. Fischer  Iulian I. Iordachita  Reza Seifabadi  Nathan B. Cho  Kemal Tuncali  Gabor Fichtinger  Clare M. Tempany  Nobuhiko Hata
Affiliation:1. Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women??s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis St., ASB-I, L1-050, Boston, MA, 02115, USA
2. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 100 Institute Road, Worcester, MA, 01609, USA
3. Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles St., Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA
5. School of Computing, Queen??s University, 25 Union St., 557 Goodwin Hall, Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6, Canada
4. Department of Computer Science, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles St., Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA
Abstract:

Purpose

To evaluate the targeting accuracy of a small profile MRI-compatible pneumatic robot for needle placement that can angulate a needle insertion path into a large accessible target volume.

Methods

We extended our MRI-compatible pneumatic robot for needle placement to utilize its four degrees-of-freedom (4-DOF) mechanism with two parallel triangular structures and support transperineal prostate biopsies in a closed-bore magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. The robot is designed to guide a needle toward a lesion so that a radiologist can manually insert it in the bore. The robot is integrated with navigation software that allows an operator to plan angulated needle insertion by selecting a target and an entry point. The targeting error was evaluated while the angle between the needle insertion path and the static magnetic field was between ?5.7° and 5.7° horizontally and between ?5.7° and 4.3° vertically in the MRI scanner after sterilizing and draping the device.

Results

The robot positioned the needle for angulated insertion as specified on the navigation software with overall targeting error of 0.8 ± 0.5mm along the horizontal axis and 0.8 ± 0.8mm along the vertical axis. The two-dimensional root-mean-square targeting error on the axial slices as containing the targets was 1.4mm.

Conclusions

Our preclinical evaluation demonstrated that the MRI-compatible pneumatic robot for needle placement with the capability to angulate the needle insertion path provides targeting accuracy feasible for clinical MRI-guided prostate interventions. The clinical feasibility has to be established in a clinical study.
Keywords:
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