Barrel life and attendant accuracy is an interesting study.
Seemingly, barrels do not always play by the rules, either.
The 220 Swift [my favorite varmint caliber] is supposed to be a real barrel burner.
Some of the early Winchesters so chambered started to lose accuracy with less than 1000 rounds fired.
But the early Swift loadings were fairly "hot", and those used to shooting the smaller capacity 22 centerfires in long shot strings did not realize how much damage they were doing to those soft steel Swift barrels by shooting them similarly.
My first Swift, a Ruger 77V, was a very accurate rifle, and I noticed little deterioration of accuracy until it had around 2500 rounds down the pipe.
I never shot it hot, but the loads I used were not mild by any stretch of the imagination.
It was cleaned regularly, using a bore guide, and took a lot of crows, chucks, etc, etc.
When I rebarrelled it at around 3000 rounds, I took the old barrel and split the last 10" of it to look at the rifling and throat.
There was no visible rifling for the first 4½" This rifle was still shooting around 1¼ moa when I took the barrel off. I was amazed.
An acquaintance of mine had a 6.5/300 Weatherby built. His accuracy went away at just over 400 rounds.
But....he would shoot it until the barrel was piping hot. You could not touch it with bare hands.
When I sectioned that barrel, it had some rifling left, but the inside of that barrel looked like snakeskin for 8" or a bit more up from the throat.
I burned out a couple of 6mm Remington barrels. Used a lot of powder doing that.
Also managed to eat the throat out of a 308 Norma Mag. Many tins of powder to do that as well.
For a BR shooter, .005" can mean a lost match
For a varmint hunter this difference would not be noticed.
For a big game hunter, a 1½ moa rifle will handily take any game out to 400+ yards.
Helps to put perspective into the matter.
I would say that 204 barrel would last 2K -2.5K rounds quite nicely, perhaps more. Enjoy it to the fullest!!
At the end of it all, a new barrel solves the issue completely.
Regards, Eagleye.