PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Robotic middle ear access for cochlear implantation: First in man.

  • Marco Caversaccio,
  • Wilhelm Wimmer,
  • Juan Anso,
  • Georgios Mantokoudis,
  • Nicolas Gerber,
  • Christoph Rathgeb,
  • Daniel Schneider,
  • Jan Hermann,
  • Franca Wagner,
  • Olivier Scheidegger,
  • Markus Huth,
  • Lukas Anschuetz,
  • Martin Kompis,
  • Tom Williamson,
  • Brett Bell,
  • Kate Gavaghan,
  • Stefan Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220543
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. e0220543

Abstract

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To demonstrate the feasibility of robotic middle ear access in a clinical setting, nine adult patients with severe-to-profound hearing loss indicated for cochlear implantation were included in this clinical trial. A keyhole access tunnel to the tympanic cavity and targeting the round window was planned based on preoperatively acquired computed tomography image data and robotically drilled to the level of the facial recess. Intraoperative imaging was performed to confirm sufficient distance of the drilling trajectory to relevant anatomy. Robotic drilling continued toward the round window. The cochlear access was manually created by the surgeon. Electrode arrays were inserted through the keyhole tunnel under microscopic supervision via a tympanomeatal flap. All patients were successfully implanted with a cochlear implant. In 9 of 9 patients the robotic drilling was planned and performed to the level of the facial recess. In 3 patients, the procedure was reverted to a conventional approach for safety reasons. No change in facial nerve function compared to baseline measurements was observed. Robotic keyhole access for cochlear implantation is feasible. Further improvements to workflow complexity, duration of surgery, and usability including safety assessments are required to enable wider adoption of the procedure.