Individualized online exercise therapy aids recovery in pediatric long-COVID-findings from an exploratory randomized controlled trial.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of an individualized online exercise therapy (IOET) designed to improve physical capacity and quality of life in children and adolescents with long-COVID. In a prospective, randomized, single-center exploratory trial, 14 patients aged 9-17 years with long-COVID (median symptom duration: 21 months) received either 6 or 12 weeks of IOET. Sessions were held twice weekly via telemedicine and individually adapted to physical ability and symptoms. Primary outcomes were functional performance (6-minute walk test [6MWT], sit-to-stand test [STST], and handgrip strength test [HST]). Secondary outcomes included school attendance, quality of life (PedsQL), safety, and self-reported recovery. All participants showed clinically improvements. In the 12-week IOET group, 6MWT increased from 396.0 to 616.3 m (+ 220.3 m, 95% CI 98.2-342.4), STST from 25.4 to 32.6 repetitions (+ 7.2, 1.9-12.5), and HST from 16.6 to 27.1 kg (+ 10.5 kg, 4.8-16.1). The 6-week group improved comparably (6MWT: 429.0 m to 601.6 m, (+ 172.6 m, 64.7-280.6); STST: 21.6 to 31.7 (+ 10.1, 3.1-17.1); HST: 17.3 to 22.1 kg (+ 4.8 kg (0.7-8.9)). School attendance rose from 58 to 97%, and PedsQL reflected improved quality of life and reduced fatigue. No adverse events or post-exertional symptom exacerbations occurred. Improvements persisted at the 3-month follow-up.

 IOET is feasible, safe, and associated with improved physical function, reintegration in everyday life, and its quality in pediatric long-COVID. These findings highlight IOET as a promising rehabilitation strategy and justify larger multicenter trials to confirm effectiveness and define optimal duration.

• Children and adolescents with long-COVID often experience persistent fatigue, impaired physical capacity, and reduced quality of life, with limited evidence-based treatment options available. • Exercise therapy has shown beneficial effects in other chronic pediatric conditions such as cancer- or fatigue-related syndromes, improving strength, well-being, and social participation.

• This exploratory randomized controlled trial demonstrates that individualized online exercise therapy is feasible, safe, and associated with clinically relevant improvements in physical function, quality of life, and school attendance in pediatric long-COVID, without negative side effects. • The findings highlight the potential of telemedicine-based rehabilitation strategies as accessible and effective treatment approaches for children and adolescents with post-infectious conditions such as long-COVID.
Chronic respiratory disease
Mental Health
Access
Care/Management
Advocacy

Authors

Goretzki Goretzki, Bergelt Bergelt, Weis Weis, Hojeii Hojeii, Gauß Gauß, Götte Götte, Beller Beller, Benson Benson, Schönecker Schönecker, Marina Marina, Gangfuß Gangfuß, Stehling Stehling, Pentek Pentek, von Loewenich von Loewenich, Hühne Hühne, Held Held, Voigt Voigt, Felderhoff-Müser Felderhoff-Müser, Schündeln Schündeln, Bruns Bruns, Eckert Eckert, Dohna-Schwake Dohna-Schwake, Brasseler Brasseler
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