In my opinion—feel free to post a different answer if you disagree—it should be allowed to completely change posts, especially in cases where the original post is off-topic.
If a post mostly stays the same but changes a question from "what is the best practice" (in a case where this is marked as off-topic) to asking about technical/objective differences between two approaches, I think this is always ok to do but I also think there are good reasons to allow editing a Staging Ground question to ask a completely different question.
Why allow changing posts
The main reason for this is that the Staging Ground posts cannot have any answers, so changing what is posted in Staging Ground cannot invalidate any answers. And since a Staging Ground post isn't published anyway, there (typically) isn't anything of much value lost (especially if the question is fundamentally off-topic).
Regarding fundamentally off-topic questions, there is no reason for these questions to stay in their current form. The only way these questions can get improved is rewriting what the question is about which is what they would be doing in that case.
That being said, the Staging Ground is about improving questions to a point where they can go to the main site, get answered and ideally provide useful knowledge for future readers. Since we cannot force askers to improve their current question if they are no longer interested in it, making it a new, potentially good question seems reasonable.
Finally, the Staging Ground generally encourages askers editing their question in however way they can improve it. Being able to not change what the question is about could be confusing to askers.
Does the post state matter
While I think that completely changing what a question is about especially makes sense for off-topic questions (it's often the only way to really improve such a question), the arguments also apply for other cases (e.g. duplicates that aren't published to the main site anyways or posts in "Requires Major Changes" where the author resolved their issue or similar so I think this should generally be allowed, independent of the post state.
Special cases
If the author repeatedly completely rewrites the question to be about a different topic or similar things, it just wastes the time of reviewers (especially in cases when reviewers take the time to look for duplicates). In this case, I think it's fine to use the "Decline Re-Evaluation" option and ask the author to not do that. I think rolling back the edit is an option here but it isn't necessary.
Authors shouldn't completely rewrite their questions in the "Minor Edits" state. If that happens, the new question is published without anyone approving it. However, rolling back such a question on the main site would be hard to do and not worth the effort as it is causing too many other issues with the reviewer/editor completely rewriting an existing published question without the old version visible in the history. Because of that, there isn't much we can do against that behavior. These questions can be handled on the main site as any other question on the main site by closing it if necessary.