If the filter glass is in good working order, it shouldn't make a difference if the bulb behind is LED or incandescent, as long as the brightness is the same. But whatever you do, don't assume. You should take this opportunity to conduct a thorough safelight test, which MUST include pre-exposure of the paper. Instructions from Kodak and others can be found online. It is a bit of work, but it will rule out any uncertainties and doubts and give you peace of mind. Invaluable.
An uncomfortable aspect of the truth is that it is difficult to generalize results obtained from testing one type of paper to other varities. So a safelight setup and workflow that is safe for one type of paper might easily fog a second type. Red safelight is usually the safest for current b+w paper but also the most uncomfortable to work with. Orange/yellow safelights are easier on the eye, but some types of paper have a partial sensitivity in that part of the spectrum and will fog. The bottomline is that you will have to test every type of paper you use individually.