Differential inputs - diff all the way to ADC or convert to SE?

I've been looking at the designs of some popular audio interfaces and I found that none of them contain in-amps (or even diff-amps) for their differential inputs. Instead they separately buffer the plus and minus inputs, route them through some analog switches and gain/attenuation circuitry, then to separate drivers for the differential ADC.

This was not the structure I expected! The ADC (CS4272) likes symmetric signals, so I'd rather have the input stage to immediately convert the diff inputs to single-ended with high CMRR instead of relying on the ADC. Sure, there's not much common-mode DC since the inputs are AC coupled with caps, but what about mains hum and other AC common-mode noise?

Is this for saving cost? Perhaps going diff->SE->diff would require 1-2 more op-amps.
 
Why would you want to do that? If you want to improve the common mode suppression over that of the ADC, you can make a differential ampifier with common-mode feedback, for example, or two difference amplifiers with swapped inputs.