SURGICAL LAPAROSCOPY ENDOSCOPY & PERCUTANEOUS TECHNIQUES, vol.33, no.4, pp.327-331, 2023 (SCI-Expanded)
Background:Minimally invasive adrenalectomy is the main surgical treatment option for the resection of adrenal masses. Recognition and ligation of adrenal veins are critical parts of adrenal surgery. The utilization of artificial intelligence and deep learning algorithms to identify anatomic structures during laparoscopic and robot-assisted surgery can be used to provide real-time guidance. Methods:In this experimental feasibility study, intraoperative videos of patients who underwent minimally invasive transabdominal left adrenalectomy procedures between 2011 and 2022 in a tertiary endocrine referral center were retrospectively analyzed and used to develop an artificial intelligence model. Semantic segmentation of the left adrenal vein with deep learning was performed. To train a model, 50 random images per patient were captured during the identification and dissection of the left adrenal vein. A randomly selected 70% of data was used to train models while 15% for testing and 15% for validation with 3 efficient stage-wise feature pyramid networks (ESFPNet). Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) and intersection over union scores were used to evaluate segmentation accuracy. Results:A total of 40 videos were analyzed. Annotation of the left adrenal vein was performed in 2000 images. The segmentation network training on 1400 images was used to identify the left adrenal vein in 300 test images. The mean DSC and sensitivity for the highest scoring efficient stage-wise feature pyramid network B-2 network were 0.77 (& PLUSMN;0.16 SD) and 0.82 (& PLUSMN;0.15 SD), respectively, while the maximum DSC was 0.93, suggesting a successful prediction of anatomy. Conclusions:Deep learning algorithms can predict the left adrenal vein anatomy with high performance and can potentially be utilized to identify critical anatomy during adrenal surgery and provide real-time guidance in the near future.