Automatic detection of profanity has had a long and very anti-illustrious history in computing; one fabled (possibly even apocryphal) example was where no emails could be sent by anyone in Scunthorpe district council due to the swear-filter picking up on the mandatory signature on everyone's message including the name of their employer (and the messages sent back about why the block was happening were also being blocked by the same rule). The key problems are that the set of words that are offensive are ever-changing and highly context dependent; computers are still pretty much terrible at sensitivity to such things.
So we're definitely going to have to have humans in the loop. These days, that's the review queues (and yes, it would be the Very Low Quality queue; there are very few points that it is necessary to add profanity to make; one of the hallmarks of profanity is its gratuitousness). It's not as quick as automatic detection, but it's much more certain to get it right. We could have a list that causes automatic enqueueing, but we should not neglect the fact that people can use flagging as well; we already have “offensive” as one of the official acceptable reasons for a flag. No change needed.
My take? Found it? Flag it. Move on.