\begin{align} \sqrt{\frac{e\pi}{2}}=1+\frac{1}{1\cdot3}+\frac{1}{1\cdot3\cdot5}+\frac{1}{1\cdot3\cdot5\cdot7}+\dots+\cfrac1{1+\cfrac{1}{1+\cfrac{2}{1+\cfrac{3}{1+\ddots}}}} \end{align}
as seen here.
Is there other series that relate $\pi$ and $e$?
Also, it's possible to rewrite the continued fraction above in terms of known functions/numbers?
The infinite sum is $\,\sqrt{e \pi/2}\,\textrm{erf}(\sqrt{1/2})\,$ as given in OEIS sequence A060196. The continued fraction is $\,\sqrt{e \pi/2}\,\textrm{erfc}(\sqrt{1/2})\,$ as given in OIES sequence A108088. The sum, of course, is $\,\sqrt{e \pi/2}\,$ since $\,\textrm{erf}(x) + \textrm{erfc}(x) = 1\,$ by definition.