CRI is important for color shooting; but manufacturer's CRI listings are often, umm, optimistic - and CRI isn't of total importance. I have daylight fixtures around 80 CRI that can be gelled to look great (but I consider gelling to be good if they're 1/2 or 1/8 level gels so you don't kill all your output. Though I have a 575 HMI that needs 1/2 CTO - it's still bright as hell).
LEDs are the big new kid on the block thing, but you have to spend some big bucks to get decent output. All the kids on the filmmaker forums that got their first DSLR that shoots video for their back yard zombie flick are like "should I buy this LED", and the specs for some $300 unit show its output to be equal to one 55w biax flo tube. Not one fixture but one tube. (About 2800 lumens)
So I say "buy a quad biax for under $300" and get 4 times the output". EBay is packed with 500-1k fresnels for under a hundred bucks. Tons of open faced fixtures out there for bounce or diffusion, too.
If you're doing B&W and want some output, get some strobes or tungsten, unless you shoot in situations where you need batteries. LEDs are still kinda sucky technology (as far as getting the lumens you need to affordably shoot in a space with windows or want to shoot with low ISOs) until you can spend $1k for a fixture. (Unless you need battery power in which case they're better than hauling a generator or "no lights at all".) But I've shot commercially for decades, still do, and have yet to be where I couldn't run an extension cord. But I don't do local news, where LEDs could rock I suppose. I usually have at least a few minutes setup time for commercial gigs; for corporate interviews I tell them 30 minutes. And it's usually a quad biax with diffusion or a 400 HID softbox setup (5600k and 33,000 lumens). If you clicked on one of the current popular LEDs in those settings, you'd barely see the extra lumens.
As far as the original post - if you want to know output, it's really about how you shoot - include diffusion and distance and compare it to your current setup for the same look. How many stops more or less do you get? It can be tough to suss that out with just the sales specs.