Tomatoes: tasty but no super powers
This just in: Organic tomatoes have more lycopene than conventionally farmed tomatoes. This also just in: Lycopene may not be as healthful as we thought. So goes the bold field of tomato research.
As the most frequently consumed produce in America after potatoes, tomatoes provide vitamins, minerals and fiber -- and, of course, they're nonfat. Plus, with high levels of the antioxidant lycopene, they've been considered a potentially powerful cancer fighter.
But even as new research identifies which growing methods produce the most lycopene-rich tomatoes, the Food and Drug Administration has said the fruit's health-boosting powers can't be proved.
In a review published in the July 18 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, researchers at the FDA explain the agency's 2005 decision not to allow beyond-a-shadow-of-a-doubt health claims for tomatoes.
The FDA looked at 64 studies of tomatoes and cancer, and 81 studies of lycopene and cancer, and found the majority didn't make a convincing argument either way. The agency can ban a claim when there is "no credible evidence" published to support it or when stronger evidence contradicts those findings.
But it has strict requirements for what constitutes "credible" evidence, and only a small percentage of the studies fits that description.
None of the 81 lycopene studies were judged by the FDA to support the cancer prevention claims. The studies either used tomato consumption instead of blood lycopene levels or they measured these levels only once. Tomato intake can't be used to infer lycopene intake, because the amount in every tomato varies widely, depending on how the food has been stored, prepared and consumed.
For starters, different strains of a vegetable or fruit produce different amounts of antioxidants. Lycopene, for example, is not present in green or yellow tomatoes. And if a tomato is cooked and mashed, lycopene is absorbed by the body more readily than if it's eaten raw and whole. Absorption also improves when the chemical is consumed with fats.
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Organic techniques
How the tomatoes are grown may also matter. A study published June 23 in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry found that tomatoes grown using organic farming techniques produce more flavonoids, which have similar antioxidant properties to lycopene (lycopene is technically a carotenoid, not flavonoid) than do conventionally farmed tomatoes. Organic tomatoes expend less energy metabolizing nitrogen from fertilizer, and more on making antioxidants, than their conventional counterparts, the researchers said.
