Electromagnetic Navigation for Femoral Osteotomy Using High-Accuracy X-ray-to-CT Registration
2026-06-02 • Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
AI summaryⓘ
The authors developed a new navigation system to help surgeons perform corrective cuts in thigh bones more accurately and with less X-ray use during surgery. Their system uses a combo of pre-surgery CT scans and electromagnetic tracking to guide the saw blade in real time, needing only two initial X-ray images. Tests on fake bones showed their method was more precise than free-hand cutting and just as accurate as existing special tools, without extra surgery or radiation. This approach could improve bone surgeries once tested further on real bodies.
femoral osteotomyelectromagnetic tracking (EMT)preoperative planningfluoroscopyCT scannavigation systempatient-specific instrumentation (PSI)bone fragmentsangular errorsurgical exposure
Authors
Roman Flepp, Arend Nieuwland, Bastian Sigrist, Philipp Fürnstahl, Lilian Calvet, Thomas Dreher
Abstract
Accurate execution of preoperative plans in corrective femoral osteotomies remains challenging. Current techniques are limited by variable accuracy, invasiveness, and radiation exposure, with free-hand methods and patient-specific instrumentation (PSI) often requiring >30 and >6 fluoroscopic images, respectively. We present an integrated, electromagnetic tracking (EMT)-based navigation system for femoral osteotomies that minimizes dissection and intraoperative fluoroscopy. The system couples CT-based preoperative planning with one-time intraoperative C-arm calibration and accurate X-ray-to-CT registration from two fluoroscopic images acquired at initialization. This enables real-time, fluoroscopy-free EMT navigation of the saw blade and bone fragments relative to the preoperative plan, and is compatible with uniplanar and biplanar osteotomies. In a feasibility study using 18 synthetic femora, EMT guidance significantly outperformed free-hand execution in total angular error ($(3.05 \pm 0.75)^\circ$ vs.\ $(6.32 \pm 2.36)^\circ$, $p=0.031$), assuming the same minimal surgical exposure for both. No EMT-guided trials exceeded the >5° clinical threshold, whereas free-hand produced 4 outliers of 6 trials. The system achieved statistical equivalence ($\pm 2^\circ$, $\pm 2,\text{mm}$) to PSI for total angular ($p \le 0.02$) and total translational ($p=0.048$) errors, with no significant differences in user questionnaire scores. By transferring preoperative plans using only two fluoroscopic images while matching PSI accuracy without additional surgical exposure, the proposed system motivates subsequent cadaveric and clinical validation.