Oil filters that are rated at less than 62% at 20 microns (aka rock catchers):
Wix XP
NAPA Platinum
The test for oil filters is ISO 4548-12
To address the multi-pass efficiency of the test:
The way the test works, particles are injected at different sizes roughly by weight, such that the smaller particles are represented at an exponential distribution for the smaller sizes. The particles are injected at a steady rate and the test continues until the differential pressure rises indicating a loss of filter capacity.
So let's say for the sake of argument that the filter is capable of filtering 400 20 micron particles every 5 minutes. If you inject 100 particles per minute (500 per 5 minutes), after 5 minutes, you have 500 measured before the filter and 100 after. That is considered an 80% efficiency. If you continue the test for 40 minutes, you have filtered 400 x 40/5 = 3200 particles, but you have 100 that escaped every 5 minutes, so that is 800. If you add 800 to the 500 you injected in the last five minutes, the ratio of 400 that you captured to the 800 escaped plus the new 500, you are only 400/1300 = 30% efficient.
So the longer you can continue to filter without causing blockage, the more the escaped particles count against you for multi-pass efficiency. The reality however is that you have captured 3200 particles, which in my mind is 3200/4000 (captured vs injected) or 80%, but that is not how the test is actually measured, because it is purely particles counted before and after at an instant in time, not relative to what is actually captured over time. And of course being able to capture MORE particles for a longer duration of time actually counts against you.
The ideal would be to have high flow, low resistance, high capacity and high filtration in a very short interval, but it is hard to do that, so there are compromises. You can have the ability to supposedly capture 6000 miles of heavy use in a 30 minute window, or you can capture 9000 miles of heavy use in a 45 minute window. The ideal is probably more of a multistage filter where you always filter the large particles and you bypass a small percentage of flow to filter the very small particles without interrupting the flow or dropping the pressure.
With a really good filtration system, I think you could turn a 400k mile engine into a 600k mile one, but the reality is that most of the oil related failures before 200k have much more to do with a lowered oil pressure, and almost nothing to do (and I would say unproven) with a sub 98% 20 micron efficiency for the oil filter.