PD11-04 CONVENTIONAL VERSUS COMPUTER ASSISTED STEREOSCOPIC ULTRASOUND NEEDLE GUIDANCE FOR RENAL ACCESS: A RANDOMIZED BENCH-TOP CROSSOVER TRIAL

Alexander Thomas, Jerry Thomas, Mohamed Keheila, Braden Mattison, Benjamin West, David Ruckle, Samuel Abourbih, Reed Krause, Vi Dinh, D. Daniel Baldwin

Research output: Contribution to journalMeeting abstractpeer-review

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: During urologic surgery, ultrasound (US) is an established method for needle guidance, but difficulty in visualizing the needle trajectory may add technical complexity to the procedure. Needle guidance systems may simplify these procedures. The purpose of this randomized bench-top crossover trial was to compare conventional ultrasound and a computer assisted stereoscopic needle guidance system for obtaining renal access and mass biopsy. METHODS: Subjects were randomly assigned to target one structure in either a renal access or mass biopsy phantom using conventional or computer assisted US guidance (figure 1) in two crossover trials. Recorded outcomes included time to hit the designated target, number of successful trials, number of punctures, and number of course corrections. Participant demographics and opinions of the two ultrasound modalities were also obtained. Statistical analysis was performed using student t-test for numerical variables and the chisquare test for categorical variables. P value 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS: Of the 71 subjects enrolled in this study, 11 were attending physicians, 27 were residents, and 32 were medical students. The computer assisted system significantly shortened the access time between skin puncture and target contact compared to conventional US (79.4 vs. 51.1 s; p=0.009) respectively. Number of needle course corrections during computer assisted trials was significantly decreased compared to conventional US (0.48 vs. 2.53; p
Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Journal of Urology
Volume197
Issue number4S
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2017

Disciplines

  • Radiology
  • Medicine and Health Sciences
  • Surgery
  • Urology

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