The system can prioritize questions in the close vote review queue based on various criteria as explained here.
I propose that if the question has been triaged as unsalvageable the system should prioritize it so that it stays on top of the close queue until review completes (or ages out per regular rules).
Make an unsalvageable triage outcome count more than all other parameters (amount of previous close reviews, age of the question, etc).
I expect quicker close reviews to help leverage the obtained strong signal about the question quality and prior efforts involved in detecting and reviewing of said triaged question.
I also expect it to help askers of unsalvageable questions to more quickly learn about what went wrong and how they can improve. (They can find obscure triage results only if they dig deep and hard into the question's timeline - as opposed to seeing a clear and prominent close banner displayed to them right at the question page.)
See also: We should clean up posts that should be improved but haven't been and won't be - stats provided in there say that 73% of such questions eventually get closed and/or deleted, while only 2% end up with a positive score. I think that letting them linger in close review does a disservice to triage reviewers effort and deprives askers an opportunity to learn how to improve.
Note this proposal implicitly relies on assumption that inappropriate VLQ flags are declined as explained eg here. This assumption is in turn based on my own experience with such flags and on expectation that moderators simply have to decline them to prevent mod queue from being overwhelmed by matters intended to be handled by 3K close voters. If this assumption is for some reason incorrect then implementing suggested feature would require additional measures to address potential abuse, because in this case some users may be tempted to cast VLQ flag with sole purpose to gain priority advantage in close queue if question is triaged as unsalvageable.