Research Faculty

Adrienne Randolph, MD, MSc

Department Anesthesiology
Hospital Title Senior Associate in Critical Care
Academic Title Associate Professor of Anaesthesia
Phone 617-355-7327
Fax 617-730-0453
Email Adrienne Randolph
Location 300 Longwood Avenue
Division of Critical Care Medicine, Bader 634
Boston MA 02115

Research Overview

Adrienne Randolph's areas of research include the genetic epidemiology of RSV bronchiolitis, asthma, acute lung injury and sepsis in children, clinical trials of interventions to improve outcomes of children with acute respiratory failure, and outcomes research in pediatric intensive care.

About Adrienne Randolph

Adrienne Randolph received an MD from Stanford University School of Medicine and an MSc in medical informatics from the University of Utah. She completed an internship at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and pediatric residency and pediatric critical care fellowship at the University of California School of Medicine in San Francisco.

Dr Randolph is the founder and chair of the Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigator's (PALISI) Network. She is also the Director of the RSV and Asthma Research Study Center at Boston Children's Hospital.

Key Publications

  • Randolph AG, Wypij D, Venkataraman ST, Hanson JH, Gedeit RG, Meert K, Luckett PM, Forbes P, Lilley M, Thompson J, Cheifetz IM, Hibberd P, Wetzel R, Cox PN, Arnold JH. Effect of mechanical ventilator weaning protocols on respiratory outcomes in infants and children - A randomized controlled trial. Journal of the American Medical Association 2002; 288: 2561-88.
     
  • Randolph AG, Gonzales CA, Cortellini L, Yeh TS. Growth of pediatric intensive care units in the United States from 1995 to 2001. Journal of Pediatrics 2004; 144: 792-98.
     
  • Guidelines for the prevention of intravascular catheter-related infections - art. no. e51. Pediatrics 2002; 110: E51.
     
  • Randolph AG, Lange C, Silverman EK, Lazarus R, Silverman ES, Raby B, Brown A, Ozonoff A, Richter B, Weiss ST. IL12B gene is associated with asthma. Am J Hum Genet 2004:75;709-715.