Abstract Aim Pancreas transplantation (PT) provides diabetic cure for patients with complicated Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). We aimed to examine the impact of PT on secondary diabetic complications, including retinopathy, neuropathy, and cardiovascular disease. Method A database search using MedLINE for publications up to April 2023 was conducted employing MeSH terms ‘Pancreas Transplantation’ AND ‘Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1’ AND ‘Diabetic Retinopathy’ OR ‘Heart Disease’ OR ‘Cardiovascular Diseases’ OR ‘Peripheral Vascular Disease’ OR “Amputation’ OR ‘Neuropathy.” Results 223 articles were screened, with 172 excluded as per study design (total included 51). 64.7% (n=33) of studies were retrospective case control studies, 35.3% (n=18) of studies were retrospective cohort studies. A total of 5616 patients with a mean of 99.1 (SD± 262.4) simultaneous kidney transplant (SPK) patients and 48.2 (SD± 262.4) pancreas transplant alone (PTA) patients per article were studied. All articles examining diabetic retinopathy concluded that retinopathy improved or stabilized. 69% (n=11) of papers demonstrated no significant change to visual acuity. An equal number of articles (n=4) demonstrated increased peripheral nerve conduction velocity after SPK and PTA. 40% (n=2) of articles examining vibration perception studies demonstrated an increase post-transplantation. Improvements in cardiac events incidence, metabolic factors, and heart structure were seen in 79% (n=15) of cardiovascular articles. Conclusions Despite significant heterogeneity in outcome measures observed, PT provides benefits in mitigating the complication profile of T1DM. Standardised outcome measurement should be adopted to allow assessment of the impact of beta-cell replacement with the potential for objective evidence reversibility of secondary complications.