If you only include two probabilities -- the percentage that A will win against B on A's break and the percentage B will win against A on B's break -- then those percentages give the same match chances for all the break formats. The main theoretical requirement is that the history of the match and the score does not affect those two percentages.
If you include psychological factors somehow -- the players' attitudes, "spine", momentum and so forth -- those may enter into the calculations, but that path is unclear. It is common for fans to say things like, "He gets really good momentum when he starts to put a pack together," and that would be an argument for winner breaks improving that player's chances against someone who doesn't have the "momentum" effect in their game.
The main idea about this in sports is the "hot hand" effect, originally in basketball. The first serious study indicated there was no effect. More recent studies seem to show there may be a small effect in some people. Here's what The Wiki has to say about it:
en.wikipedia.org