A well calibrated PT100 / PT1000 can get you to down to milikelvin resolution and the 4-wire readout significantly enhances the stability of the readout circuit (widely eliminating the influence of cables/plugs etc.)
Yeah but that level of accuracy requires some stunning engineering. For example, often you hear stuff like above: "especially in the 4-wires configuration"; sounds like people assume that PT100/1000 is
good and 4-wire configuration just makes it
even better. In reality if you even try with two wires and some circuit similar to what you would use with NTC, you
easily have error of some freaking five degrees C. NTC is
much easier because resistance is higher and the curve is steeper, i.e., small change in temperature results in significant change in resistance.
Both PT1000 and PT100 "suffer" from the fact that small temperature changes result in small resistance changes and those are hard to sense, plus the absolute resistance especially on PT100 is very small.
I always laugh when people who talk about millikelvin accuracy then go on with a 3-wire arrangement and say "it's good enough". No, you really
need the 4-wire configuration; you really need self-heating prevention (periodic readout), you really need super careful analog front end design.
To get even +/-0.2 degC reliably out of PT100 or PT1000 is a real project. There are helpful ICs and appnotes, but it needs to be taken seriously. Then again, if you are running within some limited temperature range, a fake DS18B20 out of Ebay or cheapest NTC driven from a random 1% 4.7k pull-up into MCU ADC pin, calibrated once at known temperature, might give you the same +/-0.2degC!
TLDR: PT1000 and especially PT100 require care and experience to exceed the accuracy of NTC!