You're given a photosensitizing drug. These medicines can be a gel or a liquid. They can also be taken through an intravenous (I.V.) line in a vein. Then a doctor exposes the skin to light. The light can come from a laser. It can also come from a bulb with a specific wavelength of light.
When skin is exposed to light, an oxygen molecule is created. It kills harmful cells. The molecule also damages blood vessels. After this reaction, the immune system works harder. Sometimes PDT is used to treat internal tumors. These can be in the lungs, throat, and airways. The doctor inserts a thin flexible tube down the esophagus. The tube (an endoscope) has a camera at the end. A fiber optic cable is threaded through the endoscope. The cable casts light onto the harmful cells.