Currently, if a post receives an edit while it is in the Low Quality Posts review queue, it is immediately removed from review. This feature was built around the old functionality of that review queue, where the system would identify potential low-quality posts based on its heuristics. The thinking is that if the post could be improved via an edit, it no longer needed to be considered for deletion.
However, the nature of that queue has changed with the addition of posts flagged as "not an answer" or manually flagged as "very low quality" by community members now ending up in this queue. This allows obvious non-answers to be deleted by the community after a vote, taking a large burden off of moderators.
This voting process is short-circuited by the immediate removal of posts from the queue with an edit by a well-meaning, but possibly mistaken, reviewer. I have observed several instances of non-answers making it through review in this fashion and being allowed to live on the site.
One such example is this answer (now deleted), which is clearly a question being asked in an answer. It was flagged by two users as a non-answer and went into the queue. In the queue it accumulated delete votes, clearing the first two flags as helpful, but one reviewer chose to edit the post. That immediately removed it from review before it could be deleted and allowed it to hang around on the site. It took another user to flag it again for moderators to step in and delete the post.
The use of edits to remove posts from review might have worked with system-identified ones, but I propose that posts manually flagged by users not be removed instantly from review on being edited. At least posts flagged as "not an answer" should be prevented from being removed in this manner. It has caused many non-answers to slip through Low Quality Posts review, for a review queue that has otherwise been doing a great job of handling these.
This might be a feature request more specific to the way that reviews work on Stack Overflow, so I'm posting this here for now, instead of Meta.SE.