Comparative evaluation of instrument segmentation and tracking methods in minimally invasive surgery
Sebastian Bodenstedt, Max Allan, Anthony Agustinos, Xiaofei Du, Luis Garcia-Peraza-Herrera, Hannes Kenngott, Thomas Kurmann, Beat Müller-Stich, Sebastien Ourselin, Daniil Pakhomov, Raphael Sznitman, Marvin Teichmann, Martin Thoma, Tom Vercauteren, Sandrine Voros, Martin Wagner, Pamela Wochner, Lena Maier-Hein, Danail Stoyanov, Stefanie Speidel
- Year
- 2018
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Intraoperative segmentation and tracking of minimally invasive instruments is a prerequisite for computer- and robotic-assisted surgery. Since additional hardware like tracking systems or the robot encoders are cumbersome and lack accuracy, surgical vision is evolving as promising techniques to segment and track the instruments using only the endoscopic images. However, what is missing so far are common image data sets for consistent evaluation and benchmarking of algorithms against each other. The paper presents a comparative validation study of different vision-based methods for instrument segmentation and tracking in the context of robotic as well as conventional laparoscopic surgery. The contribution of the paper is twofold: we introduce a comprehensive validation data set that was provided to the study participants and present the results of the comparative validation study. Based on the results of the validation study, we arrive at the conclusion that modern deep learning approaches outperform other methods in instrument segmentation tasks, but the results are still not perfect. Furthermore, we show that merging results from different methods actually significantly increases accuracy in comparison to the best stand-alone method. On the other hand, the results of the instrument tracking task show that this is still an open challenge, especially during challenging scenarios in conventional laparoscopic surgery.
Keywords
Related papers
Campbell-Walsh urology
Alan J. Wein editor-in-chief
2012
Principles of Robot Motion: Theory, Algorithms, and Implementations
Howie Choset, Jean‐Claude Latombe
2005
Minimally Invasive versus Abdominal Radical Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer
Pedro T. Ramírez, Michael Frumovitz, René Pareja +16 more
2018
Guideline for Management of the Clinical T1 Renal Mass
Steven C. Campbell, Andrew C. Novick, Arie S. Belldegrun +9 more
2009