filename : Sch23a.pdf entry : article conference : IPCAI 2023, Munich, Germany, 20-21 June, 2023 pages : 7 year : 2023 month : 04 title : Automated and Data-Driven Plate Computation for Presurgical Cleft Lip and Palate Treatment subtitle : author : Till N. Schnabel, Baran Gözcü, Paulo Gotardo, Lasse Lingens, Daniel Dorda, Frawa Vetterli, Ashraf Emhemmed, Prasad Nalabothu, Yoriko Lill, Benito K. Benitez, Andreas A. Mueller, Markus Gross, Barbara Solenthaler booktitle : ISSN/ISBN : 1861-6429 editor : publisher : International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery publ.place : volume : issue : language : English keywords : Presurgical orthopedic plates, Cleft lip and palate, Automated digital design, Orthopedic treatment, Mesh landmark detection, Geometry processing abstract : Purpose: Presurgical orthopedic plates are widely used for the treatment of cleft lip and palate, which is the most common craniofacial birth defect. For the traditional plate fabrication, an impression is taken under airway-endangering conditions, which recent digital alternatives overcome via intraoral scanners. However, these alternatives demand proficiency in 3D modeling software in addition to the generally required clinical knowledge of plate design. Methods: We address these limitations with a data-driven and fully automated digital pipeline, endowed with a graphical user interface. The pipeline adopts a deep learning model to landmark raw intraoral scans of arbitrary mesh topology and orientation, which guides the nonrigid surface registration subsequently employed to segment the scans. The plates that are individually fit to these segmented scans are 3D-printable and offer optional customization. Results: With the distance to the alveolar ridges closely centered around the targeted 0.1mm, our pipeline computes tightly fitting plates in less than 3min. The plates were approved in 12 out of 12 cases by two cleft care professionals in a printed-model-based evaluation. Moreover, since the pipeline was implemented in clinical routine in two hospitals, 19 patients have been undergoing treatment utilizing our automated designs. Conclusion: The results demonstrate that our automated pipeline meets the high precision requirements of the medical setting employed in cleft lip and palate care while substantially reducing the design time and required clinical expertise, which could facilitate access to this presurgical treatment, especially in low-income countries.