Augmented Reality Navigation-Assisted Laparoscopic Hepatectomy: A Retrospective Comparison of Anatomical and Non-anatomical Resection
Haisong Xu, Wenhao Huang, Huoling Luo, An Zhang, Yuehua Guo, Gongze Peng, Tianchong Wu, Yongzhu HeBackground
Augmented reality navigation (ARN) has been increasingly applied in laparoscopic liver surgery to improve anatomical orientation and surgical precision. However, its clinical value compared with conventional anatomical liver resection (ALR) and non-anatomical liver resection (NALR) remains unclear.
Method
This retrospective single-center study included 96 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who underwent laparoscopic hepatectomy from January 2019 to December 2021. Patients were divided into three groups: ARN-assisted laparoscopic nonanatomic hepatectomy (Group A, n=28), laparoscopic anatomical hepatectomy without navigation (Group B, n=35), and laparoscopic nonanatomic hepatectomy without navigation (Group C, n=33). Baseline demographic, clinical, tumor, and segmental distributions were comparable among groups. Postoperative outcomes, postoperative complications, and 36-month follow-up data were analyzed.
Result
Preoperative characteristics did not significantly differ among the three groups. Operative time was significantly shorter in Group A than in Group B (
Conclusion
In this cohort, ARN-assisted laparoscopic nonanatomic hepatectomy was associated with reduced operative time and blood loss and demonstrated short-term oncological outcomes similar to anatomical hepatectomy. These findings suggest that ARN may enhance the effectiveness of non-anatomical hepatectomy; however, confirmation in larger prospective studies is required.