Yeah, most LED’s don’t produce UV, but some of them do (typically it’s 395nm UV that I’ve seen). As mentioned, good companies usually have a spectrum graph (sometimes they’ll even tell you some of the specific wavelengths included - this is more common when the light uses an atypical wavelength like UV, IR, or both) and a PPFD graph (basically a graph showing PAR readings on a grid with the light raised to a certain height above it - lots of grow lights, for example, show PPFD graphs for three different heights).
As long as the light has a good spectrum with good PAR output, it should be able to grow anything you want it to just fine.