The Isabellenhütte RUG series of resistors is physically very large. The factory recommends bolting it to a heat sink for high currents. The factory data sheet shows a 2000 hour test at 110 deg C with no detectable drift. I'm sure the 110 deg C test was in an oven with current only applied while testing it. The resistor is rated for 140 deg C.
NANDblog shared that they saw more drift than they were expecting with the RUG series at low power while bolted to a heat sink.
Could the large package be distorting when bolted to a heat sink and acting like a strain gauge? The package stress could come from the initial connection to the heat sink or a differential metal expansion as it's dissipating power.
The shunt was used for a long time. 5 years at least.
The datasheet 1st page specifies 0.2% The drift we read on the traceable calibration paper was less than this. It behaved according to the datasheet.
The drift was more than we expected.
The shunt was mounted on an extruded aluminium heatsink (about 8cm thick in total with fins). There was careful care take, so connecting the shunt assembly did not stress the current terminals of the shunt. Not directly anyway. The shunt had a big semiconductor fuse on it, and overload is not likely.
Again, the drift was within spec. I have high trust and confidence in the manufacturer.