So today, we shouldn't see aggregation nodes as the end-points of a point-to-point star network. We need to see them as the junction points in a linear fibre spine, or a tree-branch structure for the future.
On this point, there is something I can reference from BT...
In
an old post to this forum, I showed a research paper from BT on "light grids", which talked about the possibility of joining exchanges, and dual-parenting cabinets for redundancy.
The diagram on page 10 shows a fibre spine in such a setup, with a sequence of 8 "remote flexibility points" that allow joints to FTTC cabinets, splitters, and spurs.
Given that a joint at such a point is likely to require a splice, it isn't hard to picture a "remote flexibility point" as an aggregation node complete with splice trays.
I have no idea whether BT are implementing this kind of proposal, but it isn't hard to see how the same kind of spine can be used in the paths out from an exchange, even when they are single-ended.
And to bring this back on-topic...
With such a distribution architecture in place, with plenty of spare capacity in the spine in the form of dark fibre, it is certainly possible for a "leased line" business to be built on top of this distribution, where fibre only needs to be pulled back to the nearest aggregation node, and spliced into a point-to-point circuit rather than a shared GPON.
These fibres would probably need managing separately back at the OLT/Handover node, to ensure lack of contention.