• Annals of surgery · Sep 2019

    Computer Vision Analysis of Intraoperative Video: Automated Recognition of Operative Steps in Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy.

    • Daniel A Hashimoto, Guy Rosman, Elan R Witkowski, Caitlin Stafford, Allison J Navarette-Welton, David W Rattner, Keith D Lillemoe, Daniela L Rus, and Ozanan R Meireles.
    • Surgical Artificial Intelligence and Innovation Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.
    • Ann. Surg. 2019 Sep 1; 270 (3): 414-421.

    Objective(S)To develop and assess AI algorithms to identify operative steps in laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG).BackgroundComputer vision, a form of artificial intelligence (AI), allows for quantitative analysis of video by computers for identification of objects and patterns, such as in autonomous driving.MethodsIntraoperative video from LSG from an academic institution was annotated by 2 fellowship-trained, board-certified bariatric surgeons. Videos were segmented into the following steps: 1) port placement, 2) liver retraction, 3) liver biopsy, 4) gastrocolic ligament dissection, 5) stapling of the stomach, 6) bagging specimen, and 7) final inspection of staple line. Deep neural networks were used to analyze videos. Accuracy of operative step identification by the AI was determined by comparing to surgeon annotations.ResultsEighty-eight cases of LSG were analyzed. A random 70% sample of these clips was used to train the AI and 30% to test the AI's performance. Mean concordance correlation coefficient for human annotators was 0.862, suggesting excellent agreement. Mean (±SD) accuracy of the AI in identifying operative steps in the test set was 82% ± 4% with a maximum of 85.6%.ConclusionsAI can extract quantitative surgical data from video with 85.6% accuracy. This suggests operative video could be used as a quantitative data source for research in intraoperative clinical decision support, risk prediction, or outcomes studies.

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