Introducing surgical intelligence in gynecology: Automated identification of key steps in hysterectomy

Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2024 Mar 28. doi: 10.1002/ijgo.15490. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: The analysis of surgical videos using artificial intelligence holds great promise for the future of surgery by facilitating the development of surgical best practices, identifying key pitfalls, enhancing situational awareness, and disseminating that information via real-time, intraoperative decision-making. The objective of the present study was to examine the feasibility and accuracy of a novel computer vision algorithm for hysterectomy surgical step identification.

Methods: This was a retrospective study conducted on surgical videos of laparoscopic hysterectomies performed in 277 patients in five medical centers. We used a surgical intelligence platform (Theator Inc.) that employs advanced computer vision and AI technology to automatically capture video data during surgery, deidentify, and upload procedures to a secure cloud infrastructure. Videos were manually annotated with sequential steps of surgery by a team of annotation specialists. Subsequently, a computer vision system was trained to perform automated step detection in hysterectomy. Analyzing automated video annotations in comparison to manual human annotations was used to determine accuracy.

Results: The mean duration of the videos was 103 ± 43 min. Accuracy between AI-based predictions and manual human annotations was 93.1% on average. Accuracy was highest for the dissection and mobilization step (96.9%) and lowest for the adhesiolysis step (70.3%).

Conclusion: The results of the present study demonstrate that a novel AI-based model achieves high accuracy for automated steps identification in hysterectomy. This lays the foundations for the next phase of AI, focused on real-time clinical decision support and prediction of outcome measures, to optimize surgeon workflow and elevate patient care.

Keywords: artificial intelligence; laparoscopic hysterectomy; minimally invasive surgery; robotic hysterectomy; step detection; surgical intelligence.

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