Abstract
Long COVID is characterized by persistent symptoms affecting one or more organ systems for at least 3 months following a SARS-CoV-2 infection. Our study aimed to examine the characteristics of frailty seen in patients with Long COVID compared to the frailty seen in aging patients with multimorbidity. This is a retrospective cohort study conducted in the Miami Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC). The data used to calculate the Fried phenotype through the Johns Hopkins frailty calculator was collected from two separate clinics, a Long COVID clinic and a geriatric frailty clinic. We obtained the VA Frailty Index from VA CDW (Corporate Data Warehouse). We included 106 patients from the Long COVID clinic and 97 from the frailty clinic. Patients from the Long COVID clinic were significantly younger than those from the frailty clinic (60 ± 12.6 vs. 79.8 ± 5.8, p < 0.01). Patients with frailty in the Long COVID group experienced exhaustion (96.4% vs. 53.3%) and low activity (78.6% vs. 63.3%) at a higher rate than those in the geriatric frailty clinic. Long COVID may predispose patients to develop frailty that presents with a higher frequency of exhaustion and low activity.