Head, Paediatric Stem Cell Transplant Service Department of Paediatric Oncology/Haematology/SCT Charité, Campus Virchow-Klinikum Universitätsmedizin Berlin Augustenburger Platz 1 D-13353 Berlin, Germany Tel/Fax : +49-30-450 56614 - +449-30-450 566919 E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it Clinical and Research Priorities: HLA-matched and mismatched stem cell transplantation with bone marrow, peripheral blood stem cells and cord blood in paediatric leukemia, congenital cytopenias, chromosomal breakage diseases, primary immunodeficiencies, neurometabolic diseases, and coronary heart disease Infectious complications in allogeneic transplantation, and adoptive therapies with antiviral and antitumor specificity Academic Career: Dr. Wolfram Ebell is head of the Paediatric Stem Cell Transplant Facility and Laboratory for Cellular Therapies at the Charité Berlin. He graduated from the University Kiel in 1975 after visiting Medical Schools in Göttingen, Vienna and Kiel. Following residency he completed a clinical fellowship in haematology/oncology at the University Children´s Hospital of Düsseldorf, and passed the Board of Paediatrics as well as the Medical Exam of the US Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG). In 1981 – 1982 he finished a clinical fellowship in immunology, transplantation biology, and bone marrow transplantation as well as a research fellowship in experimental haematology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, sponsored by the “Deutsche Krebshilfe e.V.”. After being consulting physician at the University Children´s Hospital in Ulm from 1984 – 1988, and attending physician at the Department of Paediatric Haematology/Oncology and Bone Marrow Transplant Service of the Hanover Medical School from 1988 – 1996, he set up a new paediatric transplant service in Berlin after the Charité became the main Medical Faculty in the new capital of the just unified Germany. Dr. Ebell is member of several national and international societies as well as committee or board member of treatment protocols, working groups, and family support groups on the field of haematology, oncology, immunology, stem cell transplantation, and rare diseases. For many years he also served as secretary of the “German Working Group for Bone Marrow Transplantation”, as chairman of the “Working Group of German and Austrian Paediatric Bone Marrow Transplant Centres”, and as JACIE inspector. |

Wolfram Ebell, M.D.