GM's OLM calibration in the early-model Traverse/Acadia's was supposedly too liberal - user's often reported intervals similar to the non-GDI vehicles from the mid 2000's.....so 10K+ intervals were not uncommon. The revised calibrations often caused the interval to be reduced substantially. I think there's something to the theory of GDI soot being a catalyst for chain wear; in fact, GM mentions it in the customer letter:
https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/tsbs/2012/CSC-10038598-6093.pdf
I am not sure how much soot is considered excessive and how it'd be measured via UOA....but there is clearly a correlation of some sort.
Edit: Here is an example:
https://www.enclaveforum.net/threads/new-tsb-for-premature-timing-chain-wear-1087a.6695/post-113876
"Just an update. I reported in another thread that I had TSB 1078A performed on my 2009 Enclave in early March after the vehicle present a P0008 code that came and went once. I had the oil changed that same day. We've put 750 miles of suburban driving on the E. The OLM has gone down quickly -- now sits at 81%. If you do the straight-line math, that would get me only about 4000 miles if I took the OLM down to 0%. In the past, I've used full synthetic and changed the oil around 5000 + or -, which meant the OLM was around 50%. At the new rate, 50% would be about 2000 miles and 75% would be 3000 miles! It has Mobil 1 in it now. So, I gotta ask myself if I'll continue to use synthetics if the OLM is forcing such an aggressive oil change schedule. Anyone else noticing that their OLM has changed as much as mine?"