A New Standard in Sinus Surgery

ENT
Share:

More surgeons want access to the precision and safety of image-guided navigation systems.


A few months ago, I operated on a patient with severe nasal polyps —a condition that caused significant discomfort and breathing issues. These polyps were recurrent from a previous surgery done by another surgeon who did not work with image-guided assistance. To clear out the sinuses and the nasal cavity, I performed a functional endoscopic approach and nasal polypectomy using image-guided technology to remove blockages in the sinuses and polyps in the nasal passages.

The difference in outcomes between the two procedures was night and day. The patient told me they couldn't recall ever breathing as well as they did after the follow-up surgery. They also reported the recovery was much easier the second time around.

Outcomes like this are a big reason why image-guided navigation systems are evolving into the standard of care for outpatient ENT surgery. Let's look at why this technology is worth every penny of the upfront investment for your facility.

Precise navigation

The beauty of image guidance is its ability to track anatomical landmarks in real time, meaning surgeons can navigate precisely through these landmarks and visualize anatomy they otherwise wouldn't see before getting into it. By providing a direct link between the navigation platform and the instruments otolaryngologists use to perform ENT procedures, image-guided tracking delivers unparalleled accuracy and allows surgeons to move their instruments within 1mm to 2mm of delicate anatomy.

The latest navigation systems are driven by electromagnetic guidance (with sensors attached to or embedded in the instruments) where the system is linked from an image processor through direct connection to the surgical instruments being used. It's this direct link that allows surgeons to navigate seamlessly through the nasal cavity without maintaining a direct line of sight between the instruments and the image processor. One caveat: These systems require surgeons to use proprietary instruments —something that could affect surgeons who are partial to the instrumentation they've always used.

Surgeons need image-guided navigation for complex procedures involving significant nasal and sinus pathology, or distorted or aberrant anatomy.

Although most of today's image-guided systems employ electromagnetic guidance, older systems still use infrared guidance efficiently. This infrared guidance comes in two forms:

  • Passive. Fiducial markers are placed on the patient and use instruments that reflect infrared light back to the system's camera.
  • Active. Infrared-emitting diodes are placed on surgical instruments that are tracked with an overhanging camera.

While any type of image-guided technology is better than none at all, I'm partial to electromagnetic guidance ?—largely because of its accuracy and because, unlike infrared guidance, it doesn't require me to maintain a clear line of sight between the instruments and the imaging unit. The process begins with patients receiving pre-op CT scans, which are loaded into the system's 3D navigator. Once the images are loaded, we calibrate the patient's actual facial structure to the radiologic images, and the computer matches the two up through an algorithm. This process allows us to map out the optimal route to the anatomy we need to access, and the electromagnetic tracking allows us to guide our instruments safely and efficiently along the preplanned surgical pathway.

Obviously, image guidance doesn't replace the superior skill and technique of surgeons who perform delicate ENT procedures, nor does it completely eliminate the risk of complications. However, the technology is an effective tool that lets surgeons identify and avoid areas of the nasal cavity that, if breached, could cause disastrous outcomes: the sphenoid sinus, which is in close proximity to the carotid artery and optic nerve; the roof of the ethmoid, an area separated from the brain by a very thin plate of bone; and the lamina papyracea, a structure that separates orbits from the sinuses.

These fragile areas can be anatomically distorted from previous surgeries or impacted by disease. Without the additional visualization provided by image-guided technology, even the most experienced otolaryngologists would hesitate to get too close. The real-time visualization of image guidance lets surgeons successfully treat pathology that they otherwise wouldn't be able to —and the true beneficiary of this technology is the patient.

Image guidance has been a game-changer for patients with severe nasal polyposis (non-cancerous growths lining the nasal passages) and severe chronic rhinosinusitis (a painful inflammation of the paranasal sinuses and linings of the nasal passages that lasts for 12 weeks or longer). It's also helped tremendously in treating patients with sinonasal tumors. Surgeons need image-guided navigation for complex procedures involving significant nasal and sinus pathology, or distorted or aberrant anatomy.

In addition to improved precision and ultimately better surgical outcomes, image-guided systems allow surgeons to operate more efficiently, which reduces surgical times and ensures patients spend less time under anesthesia.

Rewarding outcomes
SOUND INVESTMENT To allay concerns about the upfront costs of navigation systems, consider how quickly your facility will recoup the investment as a result of added cases that might normally be performed at other facilities.

Improved patient outcomes and decreased risk of complications should be enough to convince reluctant facilities to invest in image-guided technology for their ENT service lines. If you're still hung up on the high upfront costs (you'll spend a minimum of $100,000 for new equipment), consider how quickly you'll recoup that investment based on surgeons who want to work with the technology brining additional cases to your facility and improved patient outcomes.

You might also want to try another approach. As recently as five years ago, you could've made the argument that imagine-guided navigation would soon be the standard of care for outpatient ENT surgery. But we've turned the corner and image-guided technology should now be considered the standard of care for any facility that's serious about ENT. Of course, otolaryngologists can still handle the routine sinus cases based on talent, experience and an expert knowledge of the anatomy. But for any procedure that involves significant pathology, that's more than a straightforward case, surgeons should have access need to image-guided navigation. You really do need to have this technology available to safely and effectively provide the quality care patients expect and the specialty demands.

Put another way: Surgeons and many savvy patients are demanding this technology. If your facility has been slow to adopt image-guided navigation, talk to your surgeons and see what they think. For instance, maybe a surgeon is bringing your facility more routine cases, and steering away from more complex nasal polyp, or recurrent rhinosinusitis cases or revisions, that you could easily capture if your facility offered the extra level of protection and precision inherent to image-guided navigation.

As a surgeon, the most compelling arguments for utilizing image guidance come right from the patients. For surgeons, one of the greatest rewards of the profession occurs when I treat patients with constantly infected or chronically obstructed nasal passages and sinuses, and give them a pain-free existence and allow them to breathe normally again. With the help of invaluable technology like image-guided navigation, we can experience that reward each and every day. OSM

Related Articles

Wired for Success

In her 24 years as a nurse at Penn Medicine, Connie Croce has seen the evolution from open to laparoscopic to robotic surgery....

To Optimize OR Design, Put People First

Through my decades of researching, testing and helping implement healthcare design solutions, I’ve learned an important lesson: A human-centered and evidence-based...