Pope Francis has pulled out of an huge Easter ritual days after being hospitalised over health concerns.
The Vatican said the pontiff will miss Colosseum Good Friday due to a current bout of cold weather sweeping the Italian capital.
It added that instead of presiding over the torch-led procession at the Colosseum, Francis will watch from the hotel where he lives in the Vatican.
He will still attend the Passion celebration at St. Peter's Basilica, the Vatican added.
After a three-day stay at a Rome hospital on April 1, the pope joked that he is "still alive" following treatment for bronchitis.
Francis, 86, was first admitted to the Gemelli Polyclinic last Wednesday after reportedly having breathing difficulties following his weekly public audience.
The pontiff was treated with antibiotics administered intravenously, the Vatican said.
Before departing, Francis hugged a couple whose five-year-old daughter had died on Friday night at the hospital.
Serena Subania, mother of Angelica, sobbed as she pressed her head into the chest of the Pope, who put a hand on her head.
When a boy showed him his arm cast, the pope made a gesture as if to ask "Do you have a pen?" A papal aide handed Francis one, and he autographed the cast.
It comes after the pope spent 10 days at the same hospital in July 2021 following surgery for an intestinal narrowing, when he had 33 centimetres of his colon removed.
Soon after that visit, Francis said he had recovered fully and could eat normally, but in a January 24 interview said the diverticulosis, or bulges in his intestinal wall, had "returned".
However, he also said he was in good shape and that a slight bone fracture in his knee from a fall had healed without surgery and was ready to get on with his agenda.
He said at the time: "I’m in good health. For my age, I’m normal. I might die tomorrow, but it’s under control. I’m in good health."
He also indicated he has no plans to resign, although if he were to step down he reiterated that he would want to be called “bishop emeritus of Rome,” rather than “pope emeritus,” the title given his predecessor, Benedict XVI.
In the interview, he said it was premature to “regularise or regulate” papal retirements because the Vatican had too little experience upon which to draw.
Benedict XVI died on new years eve 2022, after nearly a decade of retirement and was the first pope to step down in nearly 600 years.
He said Benedict’s decision to live in a converted monastery in the Vatican Gardens was a “good intermediate solution”, but said future retired popes might want to choose a different course.
He told AP: “He was still ‘enslaved’ as a pope, no? Of the vision of a pope, of a system.
"‘Slave’ in the good sense of the word: in that, he wasn’t completely free, as he would have liked to have returned to his Germany and continued studying theology."