EDITOR:We thank Dr Jinabhai for his letter, which describes some of the challenges associated with correcting high-order aberrations in keratoconus.In our recent Invited Review, 1 we provide a comprehensive review of contemporary contact lens modalities for the optical correction of keratoconus in clinical practice. As outlined in the text, our manuscript intends to provide a clinically practicable overview of the relevant contact lens options that are currently vailable to clinicians, including soft, hybrid, rigid, piggyback, corneo-scleral, miniscleral and scleral lenses. Given the strong clinical focus of the review, we also provide an in-depth consideration of relevant pragmatic considerations associated with fitting these designs to patients with keratoconus.In our paper, we discuss the need for further research in a range of areas relevant to contact lens fitting for keratoconus. In particular, we outline the literature that has demonstrated the limitations associated with aberration-controlled soft contact lens designs and the need for further work to validate the clinical feasibility of such modalities for the management of keratoconus. Although still currently limited to the research domain and not yet directly applicable to managing patients in clinical practice, we agree with the sentiment that customised aberration-controlled scleral lenses 2,3 show promise as a potential future vision-correction platform for keratoconus. In a small population of seven individuals with keratoconus, Marsack and colleagues 2 have shown that wave-front guided scleral contact lenses can optically compensate for higher-order aberrations; however, as these authors note, 2 a range of factors will need to be surmounted in order for the custom correction of highly aberrated eyes to achieve clinical translation. Such factors include the complexity of fitting (and the need for highly repeatable centration), the current cost of the devices (to patient and practitioner) and longer-duration studies to assess real-world effects on visual performance.We are excited by the potential for novel and emerging contact lens technologies to become available for the optical correction of keratoconus. These developments are essential to continued improvements in the quality of clinical care provided to people with keratoconus.