It seems to me that the appropriate way to streamline these audits would be to simply consider "Improve and Edit" equivalent to bare approval and "Reject and Edit" equivalent to bare rejection.
The point of these audits is to ensure that suggestions are being reviewed appropriately. There's no requirement that a reviewer ever edit a post that they encounter in the review queue; what separates "Approve" from "Improve" might be the quality of the suggestion, but it might have more to do with the reviewer. Perhaps the suggestion is both thorough and correct, but misses some small element - a typo, a tag in the title, "Thanks" or other conversational cruft. Such a suggestion should be approved regardless of whether the reviewer adds to it.
The same applies in the case of rejections. Obvious vandalism should be rejected; if the title of the question happens to be "Please help with my problem" or the grammar is terrible or the code isn't formatted correctly, I may or may not choose to correct those other problems in the course of reviewing the suggestion. But with regard to my review of the suggestion, it doesn't matter.
Furthermore, the audit doesn't ever see what I would have added to the suggestion or replaced it with. Maybe all I want to do is add or remove an Oxford comma. Maybe the question ends with something like, "...how can it be done?????" and all those question marks infuriate me; I must delete them before I can continue. Why would an auditor care, provided I've correctly judged the other user's suggestion?
Answer
the question with your viewpoint for the community to vote on?