Carbone Marina, Cattari Nadia, Cutolo Fabrizio, Autelitano Martina, Cigna Emanuele, Ferrari Vincenzo, Montemurro Nicola, Condino Sara
Department of Information Engineering, University of Pisa, 56122, Pisa, Italy.
EndoCAS Interdipartimental Center, University of Pisa, 56124, Pisa, Italy.
Sci Rep. 2025 Aug 7;15(1):28982. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-14555-2.
Neuronavigation is integral to modern neurosurgery. Clinical studies demonstrate its effectiveness. The primary tracking modalities in neurosurgical navigation are optical tracking systems (OTS) and electromagnetic tracking systems (EMTS). OTS remains the gold standard due to its accuracy and reliability. However, inherent inaccuracies due to brain deformation, image resolution, tool calibration, and registration errors can impact overall accuracy significantly, which differs from the system-declared accuracy. Augmented reality (AR) technologies solve traditional navigation challenges by integrating virtual information with the patient's anatomy, enhancing the surgeon's focus and cognitive load management. Head-mounted displays (HMDs) offer ergonomic benefits, although most AR-based neuronavigation studies have been limited to proof-of-concept trials. This study aims to evaluate VOSTARS, a novel hybrid video and optical see-through HMD designed for precision surgery, specifically in neurosurgical oncology for targeting supratentorial tumors. Previous in-vitro studies using patient-specific phantoms have shown promising results, with high accuracy in real-to-virtual target visualization and craniotomy trajectory tracing. With this work, we further assessed VOSTARS' targeting accuracy within a realistic neurosurgery clinical workflow and compared its performance to the commercial StealthStation system on a patient-specific phantom. Our results demonstrate that users achieved the same median accuracy, 2 mm (IQR: 1 mm), over 60 measurements with both VOSTARS and the StealthStation with no statistically significant difference between the systems, confirming the non-inferiority of the VOSTARS platform compared to a commercial optical tracking-based surgical navigator.
神经导航是现代神经外科手术不可或缺的一部分。临床研究证明了其有效性。神经外科手术导航中的主要追踪方式是光学追踪系统(OTS)和电磁追踪系统(EMTS)。OTS因其准确性和可靠性仍然是金标准。然而,由于脑形变、图像分辨率、工具校准和配准误差导致的固有不准确性会显著影响整体准确性,这与系统宣称的准确性不同。增强现实(AR)技术通过将虚拟信息与患者解剖结构相结合,解决了传统导航的挑战,增强了外科医生的注意力和认知负荷管理。头戴式显示器(HMD)具有人体工程学优势,尽管大多数基于AR的神经导航研究仅限于概念验证试验。本研究旨在评估VOSTARS,这是一种专为精准手术设计的新型混合视频和光学透视HMD,特别是用于神经外科肿瘤学中靶向幕上肿瘤。先前使用患者特异性模型的体外研究已显示出有前景的结果,在真实到虚拟目标可视化和开颅手术轨迹追踪方面具有高精度。通过这项工作,我们在现实的神经外科临床工作流程中进一步评估了VOSTARS的靶向准确性,并在患者特异性模型上将其性能与商业StealthStation系统进行了比较。我们的结果表明,在超过60次测量中,使用VOSTARS和StealthStation的用户达到了相同的中位准确性,即2毫米(四分位距:1毫米),系统之间无统计学显著差异,证实了VOSTARS平台与基于光学追踪的商业手术导航仪相比具有非劣效性。