Seven-time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher, who suffered a near-fatal brain injury in a 2013 skiing accident in the French Alps, was admitted to a Paris hospital to receive cutting-edge stem-cell therapy, according to a report.

The 50-year-old German was hospitalized in the Georges-Pompidou hospital’s cardiovascular department overseen by Dr. Philippe Menasche, who is described as a “pioneer in cell surgery against heart failure,” according to the French daily Le Parisien.

Schumacher was expected to receive transfusions of inflammation-reducing stem cells on Tuesday and to be discharged Wednesday, according to the news outlet, which reported that the former Ferrari racer has already been treated at the hospital twice recently.

Citing medical privacy rules, the Paris hospitals authority declined to comment about his treatment.

Schumacher’s longtime manager, Sabine Kehm, had no comment about the report, which said about 10 security agents — some wearing earphones — watched over the patient as he was whisked into the hospital under tight security.

Schumacher was placed in a medically induced coma for six months after his Dec. 29, 2013, accident, which snapped his ski helmet.

He was moved from Grenoble hospital to Lausanne before being returned home on the shores of Lake Geneva in September 2014 to receive private treatment.

Schumacher’s family fiercely protects his privacy and he has not been seen publicly since the accident. It has been suggested by old friends that he is unable to walk or communicate properly.

The Formula One great won a record 91 races before retiring in 2012. He was skiing with his son Mick — who now races in F2 — when he fell, hitting the right side of his head on a rock.

Doctors worked frantically to remove blood clots from his brain, but some could not be taken out because they were too deeply embedded.

With Post wires