Abstract
We explored the association between frailty and respiratory infectious diseases (RIDs) through a large cohort of 423,691 participants in the UK Biobank. Participants without baseline RIDs were assessed by physical frailty and frailty index. A total of 16,848 participants had repeated assessments. We divided participants into nonfrail, prefrail, and frail groups and categorized frailty changes as alleviation, maintenance, or aggravation. We estimated risk for RIDs, including influenza, pneumonia, and other acute lower respiratory infections. Compared with nonfrailty, prefrailty and frailty increased risk for RIDs 1.32-2.29 times. Each 0.1-point increase in frailty index per year raised risk for RIDs by 47%; each 1-point increase in physical frailty per year increased risk by 26%. Frailty worsening (e.g., aggravation of prefrailty) amplified risk by 2.31-4.16 times. Partial frailty improvement did not fully eliminate risk. Frailty is a modifiable, dynamic risk factor, underscoring the need for early frailty identification and intervention to reduce RIDs in high-risk populations.