The researchers devised two universal vaccines. One can protect against up to 88 per cent of known flu strains worldwide in a single shot, spelling the end of the winter flu season.
Another vaccine covers 95 per cent of known US influenza strains, they said.
"Every year we have a round of flu vaccination, where we choose a recent strain of flu as the vaccine, hoping that it will protect against next year's strains. We know this method is safe, and that it works reasonably well most of the time," said Derek Gatherer of Lancaster University in the UK.
"Also, these yearly vaccines give us no protection at all against potential future pandemic flu," he said.
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Previous pandemics include the 'Spanish flu' of 1918, and the two subsequent pandemics of 1957 and 1968, which led to millions of deaths.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), annual flu epidemics are estimated to cause up to half a million deaths globally.
"Based on our knowledge of the flu virus and the human immune system, we can use computers to design the components of a vaccine that gives much broader and longer-lasting protection," said Gatherer.
"Epitope-based vaccines aren't new, but most reports have no experimental validation. We have turned the problem on its head and only use previously-tested epitopes," said Darren Flower of Aston University in the UK.
"This allows us to get the best of both worlds, designing a vaccine with a very high likelihood of success," Flower said.