No, because there wouldn't usually be a point to doing that.
RWRP allows for hum cancellation between 2 coils. When you have a humbucker, each coil is RWRP with respect to the other coil, which is why the two coils of a humbucker will buck the hum.
Two humbuckers, which already have their hum bucked individually, will remain hum-free when combined (e.g., when both pickups are run in parallel in the middle position).
The RWRP concern should only come into play when you have two humbuckers that are both coil split, and you're playing them together. If this is the scenario you're asking about, I don't know the answer to your question. In theory, if you put two identical Duncan humbuckers into, say, a Les Paul, and coil split it to the NORTH coil of one humbucker, and the SOUTH coil of the other humbucker, they should should hum cancel when played together. So, if you installed those two identical humbuckers so that both had their screw coils closer to the bridge, you would get hum cancellation with either both outer or both inner coils,
But, I don't know if Duncan has designed their 'buckers so that a given set will behave as I've described. For that matter, rarely do we put both screw coils closer to the bridge, so they would have to alter the design of the bridge and neck pickups relative to one another to compensate for our behavior.