No, not really. Cyanuric Acid does not evaporate and is only readily removed via water dilution. There have been products in the past that attempted to remove it, but they created a cloudy mess since they were melamine which is the same chemical used in the CYA test to make the water cloudy.

CYA is slowly oxidized by chlorine, but in a pool that's normally pretty slow at around 2-3 ppm CYA per month. It goes away faster at higher Free Chlorine (FC) and higher pH, but it's still pretty slow and not practical. CYA can also go away from bacteria that convert it hopefully to nitrogen gas though it can instead get converted to ammonia -- again, not practical nor very controllable methods.

Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but dilution is the solution to lowering CYA.