Department of Transplant Surgery, Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
The MRC Centre for Transplantation, King's College London, London, UK.
Ann Surg. 2019 Feb;269(2):e18-e23. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000003016.
The authors investigated a novel application of patient-specific three-dimensional (3D) printing, to enhance preoperative, multidisciplinary planning in complex, living-donor pediatric renal transplantation.
For children with end-stage kidney disease, the transplantation of adult-sized, living-donor kidneys into small recipients (<20 kg) with increasingly complex structural anomalies can be difficult. Establishing the operative feasibility in such cases demands a surgical understanding of anatomy to be derived from medical imaging. However, this is hampered by the representation of complex structures in 2D, the inherent interpretive expertise this demands, and the challenge of conveying this appreciation to others.
We report the novel use of patient-specific 3D printed models to achieve personalized management for 3 children who underwent living-donor renal transplantation. Each presented a unique surgical challenge that would otherwise prevent preoperative determination of transplantation feasibility. Patient-specific geometries were segmented from imaging data and fabricated using polyjet, 3D printing technology. Models were verified by an expert radiologist and presented during multidisciplinary discussion and surgical simulation.
3D printed models enhanced preoperative deliberation and surgical simulation and allowed on-table exploration of a small child to be avoided. We have critically determined specific clinical indications, technical insights, limitations, and outcomes of this approach. At latest follow-up (>16 mo) all patients remain well with functioning renal allografts.
We report the new and safe integration of patient-specific 3D printing into complex pediatric renal transplantation. This technique enhances surgical planning and can inform operative feasibility in those cases which would otherwise be uncertain.
作者研究了一种新的应用,即患者特异性三维(3D)打印,以增强复杂的活体供肾儿童肾移植的术前多学科规划。
对于终末期肾病的儿童,将成人大小的活体供肾移植到具有日益复杂结构异常的小受者(<20kg)中可能具有挑战性。在这种情况下,建立手术可行性需要从医学成像中获得对解剖结构的手术理解。然而,这受到二维表示复杂结构的限制,这需要内在的解释专业知识,以及向他人传达这种理解的挑战。
我们报告了使用患者特异性 3D 打印模型的新应用,为 3 名接受活体供肾移植的儿童实现个性化管理。每个病例都提出了独特的手术挑战,否则将无法术前确定移植的可行性。使用多喷头 3D 打印技术从影像学数据中分割出患者特异性几何形状并进行制造。由放射科专家对模型进行验证,并在多学科讨论和手术模拟中展示。
3D 打印模型增强了术前的讨论和手术模拟,并避免了对小儿童进行台上台下的探索。我们已经批判性地确定了这种方法的具体临床适应证、技术见解、局限性和结果。在最新随访(>16 个月)中,所有患者的移植肾均功能正常。
我们报告了将患者特异性 3D 打印新技术安全地整合到复杂的儿科肾移植中的情况。该技术增强了手术计划,并可以为那些不确定的手术可行性病例提供信息。