I can confirm what Kleinstein stated: long term drift is rarely specified, and if done, it's often not reliable, or the drift specification is barn-door wide.
Especially all claims from Vishay have to be treated with utter care!
I purchased 5 EA, 10kOhm, 0.0005%, with measurement protocol, oil filled, hermetically sealed VHP202Z from Vishay, which were "specified" to age < 2ppm/ 6 years.
I don't know until today, what went wrong at Vishay, but those resistors, which I wanted to use as secondary standards, already had already drifted out of specification on arrival.
The annual drift, until today, was always -1ppm/year only. The promised low T.C. of the Z - technology, as of typical (!) 0.05ppm/K, or so, was not met at all, in reality it is between 0.3 .. 1pppm/K, which is following their more realistic maximum specification.
On the other hand, in my hp3458A from 2000, they already used those VHP101 for the internal 40kOhm standard, which is hermetically sealed, probably oil filled, definitely rock stable, as seemingly it is not drifting at all / any more, or not more than +/- 0.5ppm over at least 6 years. I precisely monitor my resistors over many years by aid of ab precision, btw.
This VHP101 consists of two resistor chips in series, with C and K characteristics, i.e. their T.C.s nearly cancel, to give a very low overall T.C., which my monitoring data also reveal. If I remember correctly, the T.C. seems to be below 0.2ppm/K.. I'll check that
I always recommend to order VHP101 if intended for such high stability applications.
Those are not necessary for the LTZ1000 circuit.
Frank