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PHARMAXIS LTD ANNOUNCES PRICING OF GLOBAL CAPITAL RAISING

08 / 11 / 2005

ASX/ NASDAQ Media release

SYDNEY, Australia - Pharmaxis Ltd announced today the pricing of an underwritten public offering of 1,300,000 American Depositary Shares ("ADSs") at a price of US$24.16 per ADS. Each ADS represents 15 ordinary shares in Pharmaxis. CIBC World Markets Corp. acted as sole book-running manager of the offering. JMP Securities LLC served as co-manager of this offering. Selling shareholders have granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 195,000 ADSs. The offering is scheduled to close on 10 November, 2005.

Pharmaxis also announced that it will place 19,900,000 ordinary shares in a placement to Australian and other non U.S. institutional, sophisticated and professional investors at a price of A$2.20 per ordinary share. This price represents the price per ADS in the U.S. offering divided by 15. Wilson HTM served as placement agent for the Australian Placement. Pharmaxis increased the Australian placement from the 17,500,000 shares initially planned to 19,900,000. The placement is scheduled to close on 11 November, 2005.

The net proceeds from both offerings after underwriting discounts and placement fees and estimated expenses are approximately US$58.6 million or A$80.0 million. Pharmaxis plans to use the net proceeds from both offerings for the further development of Aridol and Bronchitol and commercialization of Aridol, preclinical development of the Company's product pipeline and further expansion of its manufacturing facilities. Pharmaxis plans to use any remaining net proceeds to accelerate the commercialization and investigate additional indications for Bronchitol, for working capital and for general corporate purposes.

This media release provides the information necessary for Pharmaxis ordinary shares to be released from the trading halt on the Australian Stock Exchange that commenced on 7 November 2005. The underwritten U.S. public offering is made only by means of a prospectus.

Copies of the prospectus relating to the offering may be obtained from CIBC World Markets Corp., by e-mail at useprospectus@us.cibc.com or by fax at +1 (212) 667-6136 or from the Pharmaxis website (www.pharmaxis.com.au). This media release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an
offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities, in any state or jurisdiction where such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to the registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.

About Pharmaxis

Pharmaxis (ACN 082 811 630) is a specialist pharmaceutical company involved in the research, development and commercialization of therapeutic products for chronic respiratory and autoimmune diseases. Its development pipeline of products include Aridol for the management of asthma, Bronchitol for cystic fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and PXS64 for the treatment of multiple sclerosis.

About Aridol

Asthma is among the top 10 most commonly cited reasons for consulting a General Practitioner (GP). Yet GPs currently rely upon older tests that are often inaccurate and cumbersome to assess airway inflammation in patients with asthma. The innovative Aridol lung function test, developed by Australian researchers and Pharmaxis Ltd, will help doctors more accurately determine the severity of a patient's disease and
allow prescription of the right amount of medication.

The simple 15 minute test uses a patented formulation of mannitol processed into a respirable powder. The test requires the patient to inhale increasing doses of Aridol, which cause the airways to narrow and contract that is simply detected by measuring the amount of air a person can exhale in one second. The smaller the dose required to cause contraction, the more severe the patient's asthma diagnosis. People without airway inflammation do not respond to an Aridol challenge test. Doctors can use the results of this test to measure the severity of a patient's asthma and the medication and dose required to bring it unde