Path tracking control of a steerable catheter in transcatheter cardiology interventions

Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg. 2024 Apr;19(4):757-766. doi: 10.1007/s11548-024-03069-3. Epub 2024 Feb 22.

Abstract

Purpose: Intracardiac transcatheter interventions allow for reducing trauma and hospitalization stays as compared to standard surgery. In the treatment of mitral regurgitation, the most widely adopted transcatheter approach consists in deploying a clip on the mitral valve leaflets by means of a catheter that is run through veins from a peripheral access to the left atrium. However, precise manipulation of the catheter from outside the body while copying with the path constraints imposed by the vessels remains challenging.

Methods: We proposed a path tracking control framework that provides adequate motion commands to the robotic steerable catheter for autonomous navigation through vascular lumens. The proposed work implements a catheter kinematic model featuring nonholonomic constraints. Relying on the real-time measurements from an electromagnetic sensor and a fiber Bragg grating sensor, a two-level feedback controller was designed to control the catheter.

Results: The proposed method was tested in a patient-specific vessel phantom. A median position error between the center line of the vessel and the catheter tip trajectory was found to be below 2 mm, with a maximum error below 3 mm. Statistical testing confirmed that the performance of the proposed method exhibited no significant difference in both free space and the contact region.

Conclusion: The preliminary in vitro studies presented in this paper showed promising accuracy in navigating the catheter within the vessel. The proposed approach enables autonomous control of a steerable catheter for transcatheter cardiology interventions without the request of calibrating the intuitive parameters or acquiring a training dataset.

Keywords: Cardiac interventions; Catheter robot; EM sensor; FBG-based sensors; Motion control.

MeSH terms

  • Cardiology*
  • Catheters
  • Humans
  • Mitral Valve
  • Mitral Valve Insufficiency*
  • Robotics*