Pilot production of specifically structured lipids by Lipozyme IM-catalyzed interesterification was carried out in a continuous enzyme bed reactor without the use of solvent. Medium-chain triacylglycerols and oleic acid were used as model substrates. Response-surface methodology was applied to optimize the reaction system with four process parameters, these being volume flow rare. water content in the substrates, reaction temperature, and substrate ratio. The incorporation of acyl donors, product yields, and the content of diacylglycerols were measured as model responses. Enzyme activity was not identical for the sequential experiments in the same enzyme bed due to the deactivation of the Lipozyme IM. Therefore, the results were normalized based on enzyme deactivation models. Well-fitting quadratic models were obtained after normalizing the data for the incorporation of oleic acid and the production of mono-incorporated and di-incorporated structured lipids with multiple regression and backward elimination. The coefficient of determination (R-2) for the incorporation was 0.93 and that for the incorporated products was 0.94. The optimal conditions were flow rate, 2 ml/min; temperature, 65 degrees C; substrate ratio, 5.5; and water content, 0.1%. The production of diacylglycerols was not well correlated with any of the parameters, and the yield generally decreased with the experimental sequence. This was due to the stoichiometric water in the substrate mixture in the packed enzyme bed being complicated by the water binding and absorption of the immobilized lipase. The main effects of parameters were also examined, and conclusions in agreement with our previous results were made.