As I said, you will only get up to those altitudes when you are really light, ie towards the end of a flight
Actually there is.
Prior to the War on Terror and the implementation of BOBCAT procedures over Afghanistan, aircraft serving Pakistan/India (Islamabad/Lahore/Delhi) from Europe would regularly request FL400 towards the end of the flights even though they only had a few hundred miles to go. This is Boeing's reasoning:
View attachment 161618
\\\\\\\\Note the part where it say the increase in cruise altitude results in a greater time at idle descent which equals lower fuel burn.
Also, as I said, aircraft can only reach higher altitudes SAFELY, when they are light enough. See the QRH for the 787:
View attachment 161619
A 772LR can't reach service ceiling after MTOW departure full stop.
At 20:13 hours UTC here is a snap shot for traffic over Pakistan and their cruise altitudes:
Etihad 402 Abu Dhabi-Bangkok Boeing 77W 35000ft
Finnair 82 Helsinki-Bangkok A330 39000ft
Emirates 512 Dubai-Delhi 77W 37000ft
Emirates 374 Dubai-Bangkok A380 39000ft
Etihad 876 Abu-Dhabi-Seoul 772LR 37000ft
CargoLux 794 Baku-Singapore 747F 33000ft
Etihad 888 Abu-Dhabi-Peking A330 39000ft
Qatar 562 Doha-Delhi B788 39000ft
Singapore 305 London-Singapore 77W 35000ft
Air India 116 London-Delhi 77W 37000ft
None of those aircraft are above 39000ft.
Not very common at all.