Yeah, I've had the same thing happen, after being puzzled something egregious apparently went un-edited for so long (e.g. wrong tags and title typos, or a question that's almost answerable due to confusion about the subject matter), and I decide what to do with it, then discover it was just a stupid audit that wasted multiple minutes of my time. Or with edit reviews, a potentially partly helpful edit where you have to understand the post to see if the edit really is correct.
So I modified my procedure: before spending any time thinking about what to edit or comment, I middle-click the question title to open the actual question in a new tab. Usually I find it already closed or deleted, so it was just an audit. Shake my head and move on, after selecting the appropriate leave open or whatever.
Having to keep in mind that the audit system might be about to waste your time with every review item you look at makes it even less enjoyable that it otherwise would be, but that will save you from the worse feeling of having invested some serious thought only to get tricked like Charlie Brown trying to kick the football.
Even so, I don't usually review via the queue, rather by looking at activity in the tags I follow, which are low enough traffic that I can look at everything that happens in them. (That doesn't alert me to suggested edits until after they're approved, but most times when I have looked at edit reviews, the edit queue is empty when filtered for a few tags I want to review in, like [assembly] [cpu-architecture] [avx].)
Usually when I review, it's because I notice a pending edit on a question I was already looking at because it was recently active (e.g. posted). Or a minor edit that didn't fix the problems, but the OP was wildly over-optimistic, so I'll go find it in the reopen queue and vote to leave closed.
I might do a few more reviews until I exhaust the tag-filtered subset of that queue. I don't feel like my time is well-spent reviewing an edit on a subject I'm not an expert in, vs. manually looking at new questions and finding duplicates for them. (Or old questions that I come across.)
The queue filter only allows 3 tags, and I'm not so keen to do reviews that I'd want to include more anyway. When I have some not-so-low-traffic tags like [c][assembly][performance] in the filter, I tend to stop before cleaning out that part of the queue.