Augmented or Mixed Reality Enhanced Head-Mounted Display Navigation for In Vivo Spine Surgery: A Systematic Review of Clinical Outcomes

Author:

Móga Kristóf12ORCID,Hölgyesi Áron13ORCID,Zrubka Zsombor3ORCID,Péntek Márta3ORCID,Haidegger Tamás45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Doctoral School of Theoretical and Translational Medicine, Semmelweis University, 1085 Budapest, Hungary

2. Antal Bejczy Center for Intelligent Robotics (BARK), Óbuda University, 1034 Budapest, Hungary

3. Health Economics Research Center (HECON), University Research and Innovation Center (EKIK), Óbuda University, 1034 Budapest, Hungary

4. Austrian Center for Medical Innovation and Technology (ACMIT), 2700 Wiener Neustadt, Austria

5. University Research and Innovation Center (EKIK), Óbuda University, 1034 Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Background: This research paper provides a systematic literature review (SLR) on the current status of augmented-reality head-mounted devices (AR-HMDs) that guide and navigate spine surgeries and pedicle screw placement. Methods: Embase, Scopus, PubMed, Cochrane Library and IEEE Xplore databases were screened for the systematic literature search to collect and statistically analyze live patient clinical, procedural and user experience data. Multi-level Poisson and binominal models were used for analysis. Results: In vivo patient data, only the clinically widely used Gertzbein–Robbins Scale, were published as an outcome in the recent heterogeneous literature. The statistical analysis supports the hypothesis that using AR-HMDs has the same clinical outcomes as using more expensive robot-assisted surgical (RAS) systems. Conclusions: AR-HMD-guided pedicle screw insertion is reaching its technology readiness, providing similar benefits to RAS. Further meta-analysis is expected in the future from higher case-numbered and standardized randomized clinical trials.

Funder

National Research, Development, and Innovation Fund of Hungary

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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