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. 2022 Apr 4;27(7):2335. doi: 10.3390/molecules27072335

Table 6.

Effect of lycopene on glycemic control in T2DM (Human studies).

No. Study Design Subjects Characteristics Intervention Effects on T2DM References
1 Randomized placebo-controlled trial T2DM (n = 57)
Mean age 63 ± 8 years
Tomato juice (500 mL/day) + vitamin E (800 U/day) and vitamin C (500 mg/day) for 4 weeks No changes in plasma glucose concentration [4]
2 Case-control study T2DM (n = 71)
Non-T2DM (n = 23)
Age > 50 years
Dietary Intake Negative correlation between HbA1c and serum lycopene [81]
3 Prospective cohort study Total, n = 1597
T2DM (n = 132)
Age ≥ 25 years
Dietary Intake Reduced plasma glucose and fasting insulin concentrations with increased serum lycopene [102]
4 Cross-sectional study T2DM (n = 190)
T2DM + DR (n = 272)
Control (n = 285)
Dietary Intake No significant association between HbA1c and lycopene [103]
5 Case-control study T2DM (n = 40)
Control (n = 50)
Age 35–55 years
Ripe tomatoes (cooked) (200 g/day) for 30 days No significant changes in fasting blood sugar and HbA1c levels [104]
6 Case-control study T2DM (n = 87)
Control (n = 122)
Dietary intake HbA1c and FBG levels decreased significantly with higher lycopene intake [105]

DR: diabetic retinopathy; HbA1c: glycated hemoglobin; T2DM: type II diabetes mellitus.