Close votes can be cast outside of the review queue (and are in such cases not shown in the queue entry once it's complete: they're not part of the review). In fact, in this case, that's (probably) what actually triggered the review in the first place: someone cast a vote and a review entry was created accordingly; the question carried its first close vote in, collected three more for a total of four, then the review entry was closed out (by editing), so the queue will no longer direct close-vote-capable users at it. Close votes will age away one by one if there's been enough (100, last I checked) views on the question and enough time since the last flag or vote cast on that question. Every fresh vote or flag added will trigger another review entry if there's no active one.
A question may be closed entirely outside of the review queue, or entirely inside it: close votes are equally effective either way. The queue just automates focusing an existing ability on questions that are likely to need it. So it's incorrect to think in terms of "this question is X far from being closed, per the review entry"; rather, the number of current close votes is the only way to tell.
Note that the semantics of the Edit option are basically this: "This question does not need to be closed, and I will edit it to make that clear." If that's not what you meant, you should not have chosen that option.
I don't know why the review entry doesn't show your edit. It does on other sites. (I just checked.) The review entry doesn't show your edit because your edit was completed after someone else had voted Leave Open enough to end the review. (Three review actions that select that will stop focusing that question. Once a question is closed, by any means, that will also end any associated review entries.)