David Hoytema van Konijnenburg | Medical Services
Specialties
Programs & Services
Languages
- English
- Dutch
- Spanish
David Hoytema van Konijnenburg | Education
Undergraduate School
Utrecht University
2010, Utrecht, Netherlands
Medical School
Utrecht University
2014, Utrecht, Netherlands
Graduate School
Utrecht University (in collaboration with The Rockefeller University)
2018, Utrecht, Netherlands
Internship
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2019, Boston, MA
Residency
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2021, Boston, MA
David Hoytema van Konijnenburg | Certifications
- American Board of Pediatrics (General)
David Hoytema van Konijnenburg | Professional History
David Hoytema van Konijnenburg completed his MD, PhD at Utrecht University, with PhD research in Immunology completed in the Van Wijk lab in Utrecht and in the Mucida lab at The Rockefeller University in New York, NY. His research focused on intestinal T cells in gut homeostasis, inflammation and infection using a combination of techniques including live imaging. Next, Dr. Hoytema completed pediatrics residency at Boston Childrens Hospital and Harvard Medical School / Boston Medical Center and Boston University (Boston Combined Residency Program in Pediatrics) concurrent with research in the Kirchhausen lab and Zon lab at Harvard Medical School, where he studied the function of tissue-resident immune cells in the skin and tumors.
Dr. Hoytema is a current Allergy and Immunology Fellow at Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, working in Nigrovic lab and Zanoni lab on tissue-resident immune cells in the lung. Clinically, Dr. Hoytema is especially passionate about providing care for patients with immune dysregulation syndromes or immunodeficiency, with a focus on immunogenetics and research-based clinical care for patients with rare diseases of the immune system. Dr. Hoytema has won several awards for his research and clinical work. He is a member of the MIDAS program for immune dysregulation and the program for Interstitial Lung Diseases.