Well...I'd say no...because you have not included second order effects along your column length.
If you modeled the frame using a two-joint stick element for your column (one joint at one floor and one joint at another floor) and performed a PDelta analysis on that frame, even with a reduced set of column section properties you have ONLY included second order effects due to sway-type deflections in the frame. You have not included the second order effects
along the length of the member due to member distortions.
If you study the ACI code in chapter 10 you'll notice that they differentiate between the sway on non-sway frames and between sway and non-sway moments. When your frame sways sideways, you get a "delta" that is the story to story deflection. Thus, the axial load in the column "P" produces additional moment from that delta. But as your column gets more slender, it too will distort/deflect along its length and there will be a whole series of small "deltas" that also have that same axial load.
Imagine you have zero sway - no PDelta forces from sway. And you have a perfectly straight, stiff column - no "local" PDelta moments. Now assume that instead of the stiff, straight column, you have a curved or arched, thin column "

". Still no sway, but you now have enormous secondary moments from any axial load applied.
Your computer model is NOT aware of these local deltas and the additional moment is not modeled unless you create your columns using a whole series of short segments, with joints located along the length of the column. Thus, as your matrix is solved, your model will truly generate both sway and non-sway second order effects.
See also the discussion in this thread:
thread167-5334
If you account for both of these effects, then yes, you could do your design assuming you have included magnified moments and simply use the CRSI tables OR you could use a program like PCACOL and assume a non-slender column (since you've already accounted for slenderness and sway in your model).