No. Besides not meeting specs for a Euro car, in my experience if an engine has an excessive oil consumption issue, it is rare for it to be resolvable with a cleaner of any sort.
Two anecdotal data points: wife had a Honda van with VCM when the kids were young. Serviced on time etc. Developed the oil control ring issue that lit the dash up light a Christmas tree with various idiot lights. Since it was not a compression issue, and I was not thrilled with the dealership repairing the factory engine (full ring job at the dealer level is risky relative to a fresh factory reman, but Honda doesn’t do that), I asked about a top end cleaner like the GM product. Was told Honda would do that if it were effective because it was obviously cheaper, but generally it has a high instance of not working. Like most car companies, the bean counters would demand the cheaper fix first if it could work. Subaru did this with my mom’s Subaru wagon in the late 90s, early 2000s. Had a HG leak and they insisted on a stop leak product of sorts first before doing a proper HG.
Second point: brother in law had beautiful Q7 but it had the low tension oil control rings and very high consumption. Bought second hand from Audi dealer. They tried an oil treatment of some sort (I don’t have all the details) a few times, and then the motor just seized while on a trip with my nephew. Audi was decent and discounted him into another Audi but again unless the dealership techs are idiots - highly unlikely - it is just the nature of things that if you have disassembled motors you understand that these products are more about marketing then anything else.
If your car has moderate consumption that is within spec, I would use an excellent quality synthetic at a more frequent interval if concerned about internal varnish etc. and leave it at that. But if oil consumption is within spec, unless the spec is ridiculous, I have gotten to the point where the “leave well enough alone” phrase makes more sense to me then it did when I was younger. And if it still bothered me, I would dump the car due to loss of confidence.
For those of you with high consumption, this is a case where I would be happy to hear I am wrong because no one wants to deal with the cost or expense of major engine work or having to buy a new or newer vehicle unexpectedly. So good luck with the VRP, with all seriousness.