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Urinary Metabolite Panel Dataset for Bulgarian Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Author

Listed:
  • Victor Slavov

    (Department of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Medical University of Sofia, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Lubomir Traikov

    (Department of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Medical University of Sofia, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Stanislava Ciurinskiene

    (Vsiaka Duma Society, 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Maria Savcheva

    (Laboratory of Transfusion Hematology, Saint Sophia Hospital, 1618 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Till Heine

    (Biovis Diagnostik MVZ GmbH, 65552 Limburg, Germany)

  • Radka Tafradjiiska-Hadjiolova

    (Department of Physiology and Pathophysiology, Medical University of Sofia, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Alexandra Zlatarova

    (Department of Physiology and Pathophysiology, Medical University of Sofia, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Ivan Tourtourikov

    (Genetic Medico-Diagnostic Laboratory Genica, Genome Center Bulgaria, 1612 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Dilyana Madzharova

    (Genetic Medico-Diagnostic Laboratory Genica, Genome Center Bulgaria, 1612 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Anita Kavrakova

    (Genetic Medico-Diagnostic Laboratory Genica, Genome Center Bulgaria, 1612 Sofia, Bulgaria)

  • Tanya Kadiyska

    (Department of Physiology and Pathophysiology, Medical University of Sofia, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria
    Genetic Medico-Diagnostic Laboratory Genica, Genome Center Bulgaria, 1612 Sofia, Bulgaria)

Abstract

This Data Descriptor presents an anonymized, shuffled dataset of creatinine-normalized urinary metabolite measurements from 73 Bulgarian children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), released to support reuse in secondary analyses and cross-cohort comparisons. The public release represents a pathway-oriented 24-marker subset from a broader urinary diagnostic panel, assembled as a self-contained resource for investigators working in these metabolic domains. Spot urine results are provided as individual-level values after creatinine normalization; for trimethylamine, values below the limit of quantification (LOQ) were replaced with LOQ/2. The deposit contains measurements for 24 urinary markers grouped into three functional classes (neurotransmitters and aromatic amino acid precursors; one-carbon/methylation and vitamin-related metabolites; and energy metabolism/organic acids with microbiome-related amines). The underlying cohort comprised children aged 3–13 years, and no contemporaneous neurotypical control group was enrolled. Second-morning, midstream, acid-stabilized spot urine samples were collected within the provider’s workflow; metabolites were measured by LC–MS/MS, and spot urinary creatinine was measured enzymatically for normalization. The release includes the results table in both XLSX and CSV formats, a reference limits and units file for contextual interpretation, a data dictionary, a README, a changelog, and SHA-256 checksums for integrity verification. The public files contain de-identified analytical variables only and omit individual-level demographics, dates, standalone urinary creatinine, and richer clinical metadata to preserve anonymity.

Suggested Citation

  • Victor Slavov & Lubomir Traikov & Stanislava Ciurinskiene & Maria Savcheva & Till Heine & Radka Tafradjiiska-Hadjiolova & Alexandra Zlatarova & Ivan Tourtourikov & Dilyana Madzharova & Anita Kavrakova, 2026. "Urinary Metabolite Panel Dataset for Bulgarian Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)," Data, MDPI, vol. 11(4), pages 1-8, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jdataj:v:11:y:2026:i:4:p:82-:d:1917193
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