I have known several people who have been dx with cancer in the past few months and thought I'd scare myself a bit by researching cancer rates among all transplant recipients after seeing the "warning label" for kidney transplants in the info packet I was given by the transplant team.
With PD, HD, or transplant, we are all going to die with much high rates than the general population. The question is which one will get us to live a little longer with a better living quality. The answer is very clear: transplant. The mortality rate of transplanted patients die from cancer is much lower than the patients on dialysis. If one just wants to live 10 years as Sax said, transplant is perfect, the mean expected transplanted kidney life is 11-13 years with deceased donors and 18-20 years with living donors. If one wants to live more than 20 years, it may be good to do some good dialysis for a few years and then have a transplant. Cancer occurs most likely for longtime transplanted patients.
It is just a common sense that the longer one takes the post-transplant drugs, it exposes more to cancers and has a higher risk, like skin cancer. I know some transplant patients with skin cancer after about 20 years of transplants. What I tried to make is that how to minimize the risk of cancers and take the fear of cancers out of transplant.