I vote no.
Reviewer Time
First and foremost, a new queue is going to take reviewer time. We already struggle to have enough reviewers on a regular basis to handle the current review task load. Adding another review queue only splits reviewer time further. Reviewer (and moderator) time is a finite resource, and we really have to consider how we use it.
Incorporating into an existing Queue
Assuming we added another option to the existing Low quality answers queue, the queue that currently handles NAA/VLQ flags, then we have issues reaching a consensus. Currently, the post is deleted with 3 delete votes (assuming score <=0) or 4 Recommend deletions. Adding an additional option will increase review times. Consider a post where 3 users choose to recommend deletion and one chooses to convert to comment. Under the current system the task would have been completed as the user who chose to convert to a comment would have chosen to recommend deletion, while under the new system the task needs to hang until there's a consensus (at least one additional review task).
Answers to comments
Moderators already have the ability to convert answers to comments. If something is really worth preserving an "in need of moderator intervention" flag can be used, though in my experience most of these are not worth saving. As "they're either too short and don't explain anything or just hint at the answer"
Something else to consider is there are significant features that are missing for normal users to be able to handle this operation well. The ability for moderators to edit comments is extremely helpful when making this conversion. If users are allowed to convert to comments either the post already needs to be formatted appropriately to be an acceptable comment, or the edit needs to be made before the post is converted. (This is an issue if we add the option to LQA because an Edit would kick the task out of review and then not be able to be considered for comment conversion).
We also already have a trivial answer mechanism which already handles converting the most trivial of answers posted on the site.
Circumventing reputation
The incentive structure we have allows users to earn privileges as they ask and answer questions that are well received by the community. Converting answers to comments for users < 50 reputation allows users without the privilege to comment if they answer poorly enough. Additionally, it mitigates the community's ability to vote on their content appropriately. A low quality answer would normally attract downvotes and contribute to a post-ban, however, this would not be possible once the post was deleted and is not possible on comments at all.
Comments to answers
Answer quality
Most answers in the comments are not high quality. They include only the mini-markdown formatting available in comments, and they are extremely limited in their scope. While it is possible to provide a trivial answer, a one-liner with no explanation, or a solid guiding question or comment: these are not high quality answers. While there are certainly exceptions to this rule, by the nature of the comment restrictions alone the majority of these converted answers would be of lower quality than a well written answer.
Just write an answer
The "improve and convert to an answer" option is tricky. This is likely to require a subject-matter expert to be able to make quality technical improvements needed to flesh out a comment into a complete answer. So in that regard, people who are able to "improve and convert to an answer" can probably also just write a good answer themselves. This is also very commonly done. Give credit to the user and then build out a high quality answer that benefits the community. If the comment really is a good answer on its own a community wiki can be created to avoid earning reputation from someone else's idea.
Reputation exposure
Converting a comment to an answer provides reputation exposure contrary to the intent of the comment author. Many people provide comments because they either cannot or do not want to provide a more complete answer. I think it is also problematic to turn a transient short message into a more permanent post that is capable of receiving both up and down votes, especially on the scale of a review queue, without the post authors consent.
Flag (mis)use
Last, but not least, people flag things incorrectly all the time. Mods spend a fair amount of time declining flags that are being used incorrectly. I can't imagine the workload of "this comment worked for me make it an answer" type flags that would be received.