It might improve performance a bit, yes. It might also completely ruin your performance. Or it might have no impact whatsoever because the compiler already did something similar for you. Or it might have no impact because you're just not using those integers often enough for this to make a difference.
It also depends on whether one or multiple threads access these integers, and whether they just read, or also modify the numbers. (if you have multiple threads and you write to those integers, then putting them in an array will cause false sharing which will hurt your performance far more than anything you'd hoped to gain)
So why don't you just try it?
There is no simple, single answer. The only serious answer you're going to get is "it depends". If you want to know how it would behave in your case, then you have two options:
- try it and see what happens, or
- gain a thorough understanding of how your CPU works, gather data on exactly how often these values are accessed and in which patterns, so you can make an educated guess at how the change would affect your performance.
If you choose #2, you'll likely need to follow it up with #1 anyway, to verify that your guess was correct.
Performance isn't simple. There are few universal rules, and everything depends on context. A change which is an optimization in one case might slow everything down in another.
If you're serious about optimizing your code, then there's no substitute for the two steps above. And if you're not serious about it, don't do it. :)