Alex-
I do work for an instrument transformer manufacturer and we do not use a specific formula that would be easy to apply without knowing all of the design details. The calculation method we use is based on the total length of secondary wire, based on the size wire used.
Your formula takes into account Iprim and Isec. However, unless this is a window-type CT, you have no way of knowing the number of secondary turns used. For example...let's say you have a 15 kV CT with a ratio of 100:1A. That design most likely uses 10 primary turns or so, meaning that there would be 1000 secondary turns.
Now, for a CT with 1000 secondary turns, the geometry/size of the core matters a great deal to the secondary winding resistance. You have no real way to know that core size for an insulated CT.
You also have no way of knowing the secondary winding cross sectional area. For a 1A rated secondary, a differt wire size may be used for a CT with an RF of 1.2 versus and RF of 3.0, as the unit with an RF of 3.0 has to carry 3A continuously.
The bottom line is that if you need to know the secondary winding resistance of a CT with a reasonable certainty, you need to get this from the manufacturer. This data should be on the original test reports, or you can call the manufacturer with the serial number. If all else fails, you can measure the secondary resistance directly.