The volume excess of earth due to general relativity in comparison to euclidean space has been calculated to
$$ \Delta V = \frac{ G M \pi R^2}{5 c^2} = 113 km^3 $$
(this is done in this physics.stackexchange.com - question:How much does the curvature of space change the volume of Earth by?)
That means $\Delta V$ increases linearily with $M$. Now, I'm wondering whether this is valid in general or only regarding the earth? Is that ("$\Delta V$ increases linearily with $M$") an inference out of Einstein's field equations? Is it true for any metric?