This patient support community is for questions related to juvenile diabetes including
Celiac disease,
depression, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia /
diabetic keto-acidosis,
hypoglycemia, islet cell transplantation,
nutrition, parenting a diabetic child, pregnancy, pump therapy, school issues, and teens with
diabetes.
I believe that it depends on the patient as far as whether there will be side effects to immune suppressant drugs. I have a good friend who was a recent heart transplant patient. He came through the surgery wonderfully, for he is a young man, but the immune suppressant drugs caused him to suffer neurological damage and his kidneys have failed as a result. Read the side effects carefully, for although fairly rare, we never know if we will be the unlucky patient who reacts to them in a bad way. If this man's family had been aware of the possible side effects, it is possible that the drug levels could have been lowered before permanent damage was done.
I do know that several research facilities are working with the idea of helping diabetic people regrow their OWN islet cells, hence avoiding a lifelong dependency on immune suppressant drugs. I personally believe this will eventually be the safest solution, and I wish them well in their research. All of this is still fairly new research, snd I think you will see huge strides forward in coming years.