Generally no, sudden and catastrophic. Trace water or debris in fuel is usually attributed to the failure. As I described CP3 failures are much more gradual, graceful, and with generally zero collateral damage.
On the other forum where you posted, several new members show up annually, "got towed to a dealer three states from home, they said my fuel filter was clogged but still won't start." A few spoiled cross country early retirement RV trips come to mind.
For many years the Ford CP4 trucks had a lower failure rate. It was largely attributed to the 6.7 using a lift pump. As those trucks have crept up in mileage, failures have become more common. GM made the problem worse with cover ups, blacklisted warranties, and recently they lost a class action lawsuit but only payable in certain states to owners that purchased from dealerships.
Then again, if the truck has made it 200k without failure you may not have trouble with it for some time. There was a viral video a few weeks ago of a Ford CP4 with documented 930k miles on it without failure. You'll just never know. The prevention is far less $$ than the cure and can be planned at your own convenience. Once some flat rate mechanic rips apart your fuel system and everything near it under the hood and hacks it back together just to put another flawed CP4 on it, the truck will never be the same.