International detection The Kappa variant was first identified in India in December 2020. however by 25 May 2021, the number of countries had risen to 41. , the United Kingdom had detected a total of 418 confirmed cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Kappa variant. On 6 June 2021, a cluster of 60 cases identified in the Australian city of
Melbourne were linked to the Kappa variant. According to
GISAID in July 2021, India had submitted more genetic samples of the Kappa variant than any other country.
Community transmission A
Public Health England technical briefing paper of 22 April 2021 reported that 119 cases of the sub-variant had been identified in England with a concentration of cases in the London area and the regions of the North West and East of England. Of the 119 cases, 94 had an established link to travel, 22 cases were still under investigation, but the remaining 3 cases were identified as not having any known link to travel. On 2 June,
the Guardian reported that at least 1 in 10 of the cases in the outbreak in the Australian state of
Victoria were due to contact with strangers and that
community transmission was involved with clusters of the Kappa variant. However, infectious disease expert, Professor Greg Dore, said that the Kappa variant was behaving "the same as we've seen before" in relation to other variants in Australia.
Vaccine efficacy A study conducted by Oxford University in June 2021 said that the
Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine and the
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were effective against the Kappa and Delta variants, suggesting that the current vaccines offer protection against these variants, although with slight reductions in neutralization.
Covaxin was also found to be effective against the Kappa variant (B.1.617.1) as for other variants. The
Moderna COVID-19 vaccine was also found to be effective against the Kappa variant, albeit with a 3.3-3.4 fold reduction in neutralization. ==Statistics==