Often seen with catalyst-driving reactions, because contact with the catalyst, rather than direct contact with other reactants, dominates the reaction rate. In other words, collisions between reactants in an overwhelming percentage of cases does not lead to reaction - a catalyst needs to be present. So production of product does not depend on the concentration of reactants. The enzyme/catalyst basically acts as a bottleneck. (In such cases, if the catalyst isn't present, you may see higher order reaction kinetics because the reaction in the absence of catalyst DOES require collisions between reactants. But of course that reaction would be extremely slow, possibly so slow it couldn't be observed.)