And by problematic, I mean an MCVE that is any of the following: incomplete, logically incoherent, unrelated to the question, does something different than intended and so on.
In all of those cases, the "problematic MCVE" is (in fact) not an MCVE at all.
"incomplete" - The C in MCVE means complete.
"logically incoherent" - The V in MCVE means verifiable. An incoherent example is not verifiable.
"unrelated to the question" - The E in MCVE means example. If the code is unrelated to the question, it is not an example of what the question is asking.
"does something different than intended" - This is a little unclear. But if you mean that it does something different to what the Question is asking, then either it is not an example, or it is not verifiable.
If the problems in the MCVE are minor, they can be ignored.
However, the purpose of the MCVE is to allow people to understand the question enough to be able to answer. So if a question needs an MCVE to be answerable, and the supposed MCVE is in fact not an MCVE (i.e. it is "problematic"), then the Question should be closed as requiring a (real) MCVE.
Is it appropriate for me to edit the MCVE in the question when possible?
If you are sure that it doesn't materially change the question that the OP is / was trying to ask, then I think it is appropriate. Especially for an old question.
But the fact that you think that the MCVE is problematic suggests that that is not the case.
Or would this be seen as conflicting with the OP's original intent?
It depends. See above. It boils down to the above. If you are not sure that you understand the OP's intent, don't fix the question. Closure is an appropriate alternative.
Another alternative is to answer the question like this:
"Your question is a bit unclear, but assuming that you mean X Y Z, then ..."