Stack Genius ingredient guide
Lycopene
A red carotenoid found in tomatoes and other foods, also sold as a supplement ingredient
Overview
Lycopene is handled best as a product-specific ingredient, not a universal promise. Labels, forms, and concentration can differ a lot between foods, extracts, and supplements.
A red carotenoid found in tomatoes and other foods, also sold as a supplement ingredient.
Consumer education should stay descriptive: what the ingredient is, what the label says, and where safety or interaction questions deserve a closer look.
Key takeaways
- Lycopene can appear in different product forms, so the exact label matters.
- Evidence is usually ingredient-specific, and broad claims should stay cautious.
- Safety review matters more when a person has a medical condition, is pregnant or nursing, or takes medications.
Practical guidance
What to know before adding Lycopene
Evidence snapshot
Federal sources and recent reviews show that research quality and product form matter. The ingredient should be described with caution unless a source pack supports a narrower, well-defined use.
Common misunderstanding
A common mistake is reading every product with the same ingredient name as interchangeable. For many supplements, the active form, strain, extract standardization, or serving context changes the practical meaning of the label.
Tracking note
When comparing products, track the exact ingredient name, form, standardization or strain if present, serving size, and any partner ingredients. Those fields are more useful than the ingredient name alone.
Safety note
Consumers should review the label carefully and consider clinician input when health status, pregnancy or nursing, medication use, procedures, or intolerance concerns could change the risk profile.
Dosing & Timing
Use the product label as the first reference for serving size and timing. This ingredient should be understood through label context and tracking notes rather than personalized dosing advice.
Safety and interaction context
Safety depends on the ingredient form, the full formula, and the person using it. If the product is used alongside medicines or in the setting of pregnancy, nursing, planned procedures, kidney or liver concerns, or chronic illness, a qualified clinician should review the label.
Sources
- ODS - Dietary Supplement Fact SheetsODS maintains federal ingredient fact sheets and related reference material.
- PubMed - Lycopene and human health: a review of the current evidenceSummarizes nutrition research on lycopene with cautious evidence framing.
- NCCIH - Know the Science resourcesFederal guidance for safety context and evidence interpretation.